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         Magellan Ferdinand Explorer:     more books (58)
  1. Life of Ferdinand Magellan and the First Circumnavigation of the Globe (The World's Great Explorers and Explorations) by Francis H. Guillemard, 1990-06
  2. Ferdinand Magellan: Opening the Door to World Exploration (Isaac Asimov's Pioneers of Science and Exploration) by Isaac Asimov, 1991-07
  3. Ferdinand Magellan: A Primary Source Biography (Hoogenboom, Lynn. Primary Source Library of Famous Explorers) by Lynn Hoogenboom, 2006-08-04
  4. Ferdinand Magellan (History Maker Bios) by Elaine Landau, 2005-09
  5. Ferdinand Magellan: Master mariner (World landmark books, 31) by Seymour Gates Pond, 1957
  6. Ferdinand Magellan (Robbie Readers) (Robbie Readers) by Jim Whiting, 2006-09-15
  7. Ferdinand Magellan (Groundbreakers) by Struan Reid, 2001-02-26
  8. Ferdinand Magellan (1480-1521) (What Would You Ask...?) by Anita Ganeri, 1999-09-17
  9. Oxford Reading Tree: Stage 8: True Stories: Travels with Magellan: the Story of Ferdinand Magellan by Alison Hawes, 2003-02-13
  10. Ferdinand Magellan (Why They Became Famous) by Sergio Bitossi, 1985-11
  11. Ferdinand Magellan (Fact Finders) by Mervyn D. Kaufman, 2004-01
  12. The First Voyage Around the World: The Story of Ferdinand Magellan's Three-Year Journey Through South America and the Pacific Ocean (Exploration & Discovery) by David White, 2002-06
  13. Ferdinand Magellan: First to Sail Around the World (Great Explorations, 1) by Milton Meltzer, 2001-11
  14. Cry mutiny!: A story of Ferdinand Magellan by Roberto, 1959

41. Ferdinand Magellan.explorer
Map for ferdinand magellan. ferdinand magellan was born in 1480 and died in 1521. magellan was the man to name the Pacific Ocean. Go to explorer Page.
http://204.234.22.1/SDGI/Dodge.dragonweb/Dodge.pages/archive/explorers/stelk.exp
Dodge Elementary School, Grand Island Nebraska
Map for Ferdinand Magellan
Ferdinand Magellan was born in 1480 and died in 1521. He was born into a noble family in Sabrosa. He served as a court page in his youth. Magellan was the man to name the Pacific Ocean. He named it Pacific because Go to Explorer Page Go to Event Page Go to Explorer List

42. Lesson Plan
The student will understand vocabulary found at ferdinand magellan explorer / http//www.ferdinandmagellan.com. Materials Computer with Internet access
http://www.teachnet-lab.org/miami/2003/sampedro/lesson_plan4.htm
Lesson Plan #4 Ferdinand Magellan Duration: 2 to 3 days Objectives:
  • The student will use information taken from the World Wide Web and Microsoft Encarta to create a timeline of Magellan's voyage and life.
  • The student will understand vocabulary found at Ferdinand Magellan: Explorer / http://www.ferdinandmagellan.com
Materials: Computer with Internet access Microsoft Encarta or any encyclopedia available Library and/or classroom reference materials Printable 1 : Vocabulary Ferdinand Magellan Printable 2: Research Guide Ferdinand Magellan Printable 3: Unit Assessment Ferdinand Magellan Key Vocabulary: Printable 1 Procedures: The students will use an electronic encyclopedia and view Web sites on the World Wide Web to learn about Ferdinand Magellan. The students will create a timeline of the events of Magellan's voyage and life. The students will write sequential paragraphs based on the information included in the group timeline.
  • discuss Ferdinand Magellan and his voyage.
  • discuss the vocabulary found on : Printable 1 Vocabulary Ferdinand Magellan. Students may use Dictionary.com /

43. Encyclopedia: Ferdinand Magellan
ferdinand magellan (Portuguese Fernão de Magalhães) (circa 1470 April 27, 1521) was a Portuguese sea explorer who sailed for Spain.
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Ferdinand-Magellan

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  • Updated: May 19, 2004
    Encyclopedia : Ferdinand Magellan
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    Ferdinand Magellan Portuguese ) (circa April 27 ) was a Portuguese sea explorer who sailed for Spain . He was the first to sail from Europe westwards to Asia , and he named the Pacific Ocean . He is also remembered as the first to circumnavigate the globe, although not in a single voyage: in an earlier voyage he sailed to

    44. Netcyclo: Magellan, Ferdinand
    tree1 tree 2 etc. magellan, ferdinand. ferdinand magellan a famed explorer, responsible for the first circumnavigation of the Earth.
    http://www.netcyclo.com/people/m/magellan/magellan.htm
    Magellan, Ferdinand Ferdinand Magellan - a famed explorer, responsible for the first circumnavigation of the Earth. born: 1480 in northern Portugal
    died: 27 April 1521 in the Phillipines Ferdinand Magellan grew up in an age of discovery. Born in Northern Portugal around 1480, Magellan belonged to a romantic era of the sea during which Bartholomeu Dias rounded the Cape of Good Hope, Vasco da Gama reached India, and Columbus and Vespucci made their historic voyages. As a young man, Magellan gained maritime experience with Portuguese naval fleets in India, Asia, and the Moluccas (Spice Islands) in Indonesia. Although the war chronicles of that period seldom mentioned his name, he achieved the rank of captain by the time he was 30 years old and became one of the most experienced navigators of his time. However, when Magellan and other battle-scarred soldiers and sailors returned home to Portugal, they received little thanks for the numerous victories that had brought enormous wealth and prestige to their king and countrymen. Magellan's noble though low-grade birth entitled him to a beggarly allowance, a pompous, meaningless title, and the right to become a loafer at court an unbearable situation for a man of honor and ambition. The first opportunity for renewed military service found Magellan fighting the Moors in Morocco, but that, too, ended in hardship. A lance wound permanently injured his left leg, and an unjust accusation of trading with the enemy scarred his reputation. After King Emanuel of Portugal coolly rejected Magellan's petition for a post within the royal navy, the soldier renounced his loyalty to Portugal and left for Spain.

    45. Exploring Explorers
    79. magellan.ferdinand magellan The greatest voyager of them all This was written by Raymond Schuessler in Sea Frontiers (SepOct 1984). Ecuador explorer.
    http://www.angelfire.com/id/explore/explore3.html
    var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "angelfire.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
    Exploring Explorers
    General Information on Explorers
    Explorers Provides links to reports by Mrs. Vanicek’s Fifth Grade Class at Dodge Elementary School Grand Island, Nebraska Explorers of the New World This was created by fifth graders at Palisades Elementary School in Lake Oswego, Oregon Explorers list These are projects of year 5 and year 6 students at Hallet Cove South Primary. The Exploration of the Americas This was created by Dr. Prudhomme's fifth grade class at V.L Murray Elementary. Explorer Card Student Work by fourth graders at Germantown Academy. Explorers of the Millennium This was created by some 4th and 5th grade students at Sherwood School in Highland Park, IL. It was the 4th place winner of the 1998 ThinkQuest Jr. Contest. Explorers This was created by three juniors at the University of Richmond. Discovery: The New World World Culture Page by Richard Hooker 1997 associated with Washington State University Explorers and Exploration – Discovering the Explorers Page by Robinson Research World of Knowledge Age of Exploration Curriculum Guide Latitude: The Art and Science of Fifteenth Century Navigation at Rice University Discovery and Exploration at American Memory Library of Congress Geography and Map Division Discoverers Web by Andre Engels Exploration is a Risky Business by the Discoverers Web. This lists explorers who died while exploring.

    46. HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results
    .. Portuguese navigator and explorer ferdinand magellan. magellan died .. Portuguese explorer ferdinand magellan is described as
    http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_thesauru

    47. HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results
    industries Tuna fishing and processing, meat canning Guam The explorer ferdinand magellan reached Guam in the Marianas 11.
    http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_almanacs

    48. Planet 5th Explorers
    but he did not discover it. Web Links. ferdinand magellan from Virtualology.com. The Mariners Museum. Return to explorer Interviews.
    http://www.mpsomaha.org/willow/p5/projects/explorers/magellan.html
    Interview with
    Ferdinand Magellan
    Magallan's crew first to sail around world

    Magellan was a Portuguese explorer. His crew was the first to sail all around the world, but he did not because he died before he could accomplish it. Magellan died in a battle in 1521 in the Philipine Islands. His last remaining ship was the Victoria. He also named the Pacific Ocean, but he did not discover it. Web Links Ferdinand Magellan from Virtualology.com The Mariners' Museum Return to Explorer Interviews

    49. Homework Center - Explorers - Alphabetical List
    magellan, ferdinand Modern History Sourcebook magellan s Voyage Around the www.newadvent.org/cathen/15384b.htm Short biography of this explorer.
    http://www.multcolib.org/homework/alphaexp.html
    School Corps Library Catalog Library Databases Ask Us! ... Tareas Escolares
    Alphabetical List of Explorers:
    A B C D ...
    Back to the Explorers Page

    Explorers are listed alphabetically, last name first.
    A
    [Alexander the Great]
    Alexander the Great
    http://www.1stmuse.com/alex3/alex-synopsys.html
    Detailed information about the famous leader of Greece in the fourth century BC.
    [Alexander the Great]
    Alexander the Great
    http://history.boisestate.edu/westciv/alexander/index.html
    More information on Alexander, including real audio pronunciations of Greek words.
    [Amundsen, Roald]
    The Life of Roald Amundsen
    http://www.mnc.net/norway/Amundsen.htm
    Biography of Amundsen, the first man to reach the South Pole, from the Internet site, "ODIN," produced for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs [Norway].
    [Armstrong, Neil]
    Neil Armstrong
    http://starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/StarChild/whos_who_level2/armstrong.html
    Learn about astronaut Neil Armstrong and watch a movie of man's first steps on the moon!
    [Astor, John Jacob]
    Astor's Beechwood
    http://www.astorsbeechwood.com/History.html
    The Web site for the Astors' historic home in Rhode Island includes biographies of the family. This link takes you directly to the History page.

    50. Homework Center - Explorers
    Henry The Life and Times of Henry Hudson, explorer and Adventurer http magellan, ferdinand Modern History Sourcebook magellan s Voyage Around the World http
    http://www.multcolib.org/homework/explorhc.html
    School Corps Library Catalog Library Databases Ask Us! ... Tareas Escolares
    Explorers:
    Explorers Megasites
    Alphabetical List of Explorers

    Ancient Explorers

    Age of Exploration (13th - 18th century)
    ...
    Contemporary Explorers
    Explorers Megasites
    The European Voyages of Exploration: 15th and 16th Centuries
    http://www.ucalgary.ca/applied_history/tutor/eurvoya/
    An overview of European exploration and colonization around the world.
    Explorers of Australia
    http://www.davidreilly.com/australian_explorers/
    Brief biographies of explorers of Australia including sketched portraits.
    A History of the Northwest Coast
    http://www.hallman.org/indian/.www.html
    A brief history of the first explorers, pioneers and traders of the Northwest coast.
    Voyage of Exploration: Discovering New Horizons
    http://library.thinkquest.org/C001692/?tqskip=1
    Discover the dangers that faced explorers of the past, how they survived, where the went, and why. Requires Flash plug-in.
    Ancient Explorers
    Note : if you are not finding the particular explorer you are interested in, or would like more information, please try the Alphabetical List of Explorers [Alexander the Great]
    Alexander the Great
    http://www.1stmuse.com/alex3/alex-synopsys.html

    51. Magellan - Airora.com Web
    New Advent Catholic Encyclopedia magellan, ferdinand Presents a biographical sketch of this Portuguese explorer with emphasis reserved principally for his
    http://www.airora.com/web/Magellan.html
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  • 52. Exploring Exploration - Ferdinand Magellan
    Exploring Exploration Back to Index Index To Next explorer ferdinand magellan (14801521). Curricular Fit Social Studies - Topic
    http://www.evergreencsrd.ab.ca/st.marguerite/explorers/Magellan.htm
    Exploring Exploration
    Index

    Ferdinand Magellan
    Curricular Fit:
    Social Studies - Topic B: Early Canada: Exploration and Settlement Ferdinand Magellan,
    Photo Credit:
    http://www.mariner.org/age/

    magellan.html

    Grade Level: Theme: Biography, Canadiana, Expeditions, History Resource for: Students, Teachers Prepared by: Marion Rex, MEd and Gr. 5 Students School: St. Marguerite School Jurisdiction: Evergreen Catholic Separate Regional Division # 2 Gander Academy, Ferdinand Magellan - This page highlights the voyages of Ferdinand Magellan, the first circumnavigator of the world, and describes his Portuguese background, and other biographical facts. Compiled by a fifth grade teacher, there is basic information provided and links to other sites about Magellan. This information was compiled by a Grade 5 teacher and contains information about many explorers. URL http://www.stemnet.nf.ca/CITE/exmagellan.htm Submitted by Shannon R. Top of Page
    St. Marguerite Site Map

    53. Explorer
    http//www.magellan/ourcompany/history. ferdinand magellan. http//www.usgs.gov/education/learnweb/Explorers. Understanding Maps Explorers-Christopher Columbus.
    http://www.wcs.edu/wges/Explorers/EXPLORER.HTM

    SITE MAP

    WCS Homepage

    Magellan

    Columbus
    ...
    Explorers of the Sea

    Created by the
    K (Keyboarding)
    I (Internet)
    W (WebPage)
    Camp Walnut Grove Elementary School Fifth Graders Resources Explorers Most explorers explore different lands to get gold. Some other explorers explore to see about religious matters. But others still want to trade for goods they didn't have or needed. Most explorers were brought to explore because of curiosity to sail across oceans, to rocket to the moon and dive beneath the seas. There are many different types of explorers like:Portuguese, French, [ Spanish ], Italian and even Egyptian. The Earliest Explorer The earliest explorer was an Egyptian named Hannu. In 2,750 BC he explorered to the limits of the world known at that time. He traveled to the land of Punt. This was the region at the southeatern end of the Red Sea including small parts of Ethiopia and Somalia. He returned home with great riches in precious metals, myrrh and wood.He left a summary of his adventures carved into a rock. In 15th century BC Queen Hatshepsut, who was also eager for great riches also sent an expedition to the land of Punt. Christopher Columbus Christopher Columbus] was born in 1451 and he died in 1506. He was a Genoese sailor who convinced King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain to finance a mission to reach the Indies by sailing westward from Europe. His estimate of the short distance for his mission was influenced by some miscalculations of the Earth's diameter and by Biblical accounts. Columbus made four voyages to the new world including the years: 1492, 1493, 1498 and 1502.

    54. Explorer Ferdinand Magellan
    explorer ferdinand magellan. Look at ferdinand+magellan (explorer ferdinand magellan). ferdinand magellan Products Lowest Prices At DealTime!
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    55. WhoWhatWhen - Interactive Historical Timelines
    Timeline for ferdinand magellan (java), Search Google for ferdinand magellan, ferdinand magellan, Portugese explorer, /1480, /1521, 41.
    http://www.sbrowning.com/whowhatwhen/index.php?bydesc_x=1&desc=explorer

    56. Book Thoughts - Sitemap
    ferdinand magellan discovery ferdinand magellan exploration fast facts ferdinand magellan exploration path ferdinand magellan explorer ferdinand magellan facts
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    57. Explorer Resources
    ferdinand magellan, The Great Explorers ferdinand magellan. Vasco da Gama, European Explorers - Vasco da Gama, Vasco da Gama - Top Biography. Vasco da Gama 1498,
    http://ele.n-polk.k12.ia.us/WebQuest/eplorers/explorer_resources.html
    Return to Explorer Webquest Christopher Columbus The Columbus Navigation Homepage The Explorations of Christopher Columbus Christopher Columbus (1451-1506) Christopher Columbus: Explorer ... Christopher Columbus Ferdinand Magellan Ferdinand Magellan Ferdinand Magellan at a Glance Ferdinand Magellan The Great Explorers - Ferdinand Magellan Vasco da Gama European Explorers - Vasco da Gama Vasco da Gama - Top Biography Vasco da Gama: 1498 Sir Francis Drake Sir Francis (Drake) European Explorers - Sir Francis Drake Sir Francis Drake Mariner's Museum Viking Explorers Mariner's Museum European Explorers European Explorers Theme Page Portuguese Explorers Mariner's Museum Portuguese Explorers Spanish Explorers Spanish Explorers The Spanish Come to the New World English Explorers English Explorers The English Come to North America French Explorers French Explorers The French Come to the New World John and Sebastian Cabot Mariner's Museum Jacques Cartier Mariner's Museum Henry Hudson Mariner's Museum Ian Chadwick's Biography of Henry Hudson James Cook Mariner's Museum Vasco Balboa Balboa Other Explorer Web Sites The Roanoke Voyages Why Explorers Explored Discovers Web: Contents Explorers ... Return to Explorer Webquest

    58. Magellan
    I knew I was going to be an explorer because my family was not wealthy, but of Portuguese nobility. I, ferdinand magellan, was born in 1480 in Northern Portugal
    http://www.larkspurschools.org/nc/nc_projects/explorers/13_Magellan.html
    FERDINAND MAGELLAN Magellan. Let me tell you a little about myself. From the second I was born I knew I was going to be an explorer. I knew I was going to be an explorer because my family was not wealthy, but of Portuguese nobility. Nobility means that everyone in the country knows you and your family.
    I, Ferdinand Magellan, was born in 1480 in Northern Portugal. I had a brother named Diego and a sister named Isobel. In school I learned how to ride horses. I also learned how to read and write maps, and amazingly learned how to use a sword. When I became a grown up I worked as a Navy officer. I also took care of animals. Most of them escaped or got stolen by the natives.
    I decided to become an explorer because I knew I could find new lands for some country and make them wealthier. I was looking for someone to sponsor me, so I asked King Manuel to sponsor my trip, but he refused to give me permission. Days later I crossed enemy borders to go to Spain to ask King Charles of Spain to sponsor my trip. He finally gave me permission and gave me five ships and 250 men. We hoped to reach the Spice Islands.
    Now people remember me because I was the commander of the first voyage around the world. I have inspired many explorers to travel around the world. I made Spain richer by bringing back spices and medicines. The strait was also one of my big discoveries. It is now named after me, the Strait of Magellan. I was one of the greatest explorers ever!

    59. Explorers And Travellers
    Scottish explorer who was the FIRST European to reach the African city of Timbuktu. *** M. magellan ferdinand .. born c1480 died 1521 ..
    http://web.ukonline.co.uk/m.gratton/Explorers_and_travellers.htm
    Home Page Explorers and Travellers A Adams - William Africa Association - The ..... the world's FIRST geographical society was the brainchild of Sir Joseph Banks, a wealthy patron of exploration, a naturalist, part-time explorer and the longest serving president of the Royal Society Amundsen Roald ..... born 1872 died 1928 ..... Norwegian explorer who was the FIRST person to navigate the Northwest Passage in 1903-06 and to reach the South Pole B Bartolomeu - Diaz ..... born c 1450 died 1500 ..... Portuguese explorer who was the FIRST European to reach the Cape of Good Hope in 1488 and to establish a route around Africa Bellinghausen - Fabian Gottlieb Von ..... born 1779 died 1852 ..... Russian Antarctic explorer who was the FIRST to sight and circumnavigate the Antarctic continent 1819-21 although at the time he did not realise what it was Benjamin of Tudela ..... died 1173 ..... Spanish rabbi who was the FIRST European traveller to describe the Far East Bering - Vitus ..... born 1681 died 1741 ..... Danish explorer who was the FIRST to sight Alaska Blashford-Snell - John ..... born 1936 ..... British explorer and soldier who made the FIRST descent and exploration of the Blue Nile in 1964, crossing the Darien Gap between Panama and Columbia for the first time 1971 to 1972 and in 1974-75 made the FIRST complete navigation of the Zaire river in Africa

    60. After Dire Straits, An Agonizing Haul Across The Pacific By
    not to be given to the place until 1543, when explorer Ruy Lopez the unhappy coincidence of illtemper and wretched misfortune, was ferdinand magellan ever to
    http://muweb.millersville.edu/~columbus/data/art/WINCHE01.ART
    "After dire straits, an agonizing haul across the Pacific" by Simon Winchester in "Smithsonian" (April 1991, pp. 84-95) It was only a generation after Columbus that Magellan's tiny fleet sailed west, via his strait, then on around the world. Balboa found the ocean. Then, in their droves, explorers emerged to circle and probe and colonize it, but first, in that most daring of all endeavors, to cross it. No one could be sure how wide it was. No one could be sure where lay the Terra Australis Incognita, which Ptolemy had postulated and which Mercator would argue was a necessary balance for a spherical worldwithout it the whole planet might simply topple over, to be lost among the stars. No one knew the weather or the currents or the winds. But one small certainty spurred the would-be circumnavigators onward. It was that the Spice Islands, the Moluccas, lay at the farthest side of whatever might lie beyond the waters, pacific or unpacific, that Balboa had discovered. Traders buying nutmegs and cloves from Arabian merchants had known about the Spice Islands for centuries; in the 1200s Marco Polo knew roughly where they were, for he saw junk traffic in the ports of North China loaded with spices and manned by crews who had come from the south. In 1511 a Portuguese expedition led by Antonio d'Abreu actually discovered them by moving eastward, after passing the tip of Africa, to Malacca, thence down the strait and past the immense island of Borneo to the confused archipelago where nearly all known spices grew in wild profusion. The reach their goal, d'Abreu's men had gone halfway round the world from Europe to the Orient. The geographical fact they established was of great political and imperial importance. Since 1494, when the Treaty of Tordesillas was signed, all of the unknown world to the east of an imaginary line that had been drawn 370 leagues west of the Cape Verde Islands would belong to Portugal. Everything to the west of that line would belong to Spain. So far as the Atlantic and the Indian oceans were concerned, there was no problem; but what about the other side of the world? Conquest, squatter's rights, annexation, force majeurethese cruder tools of geopolitics might well dictate its eventual position. Thus the Moluccas, if discovered by going eastward around the globe, would belong to Portugalat least by the logic of some explorers. But the Moluccas claimed by a party going westward might belong to Spain. So while d'Abreu and his colleagues went off eastward, even braver or more foolhardy men, carrying the banner of Castile, were determined to discoverheroically and, as it turned out for many of them, fatallythe way to reach this same Orient by traveling westward across the vast unknown. There is thus a nice irony in the fact that the man who undertook the seminal voyage, and did so in the name of Spain, was in fact Portuguese. He was born Fernao de Magalhaes, and the Portuguese"He is ours," they insistrarely care to acknowledge that he renounced his citizenship after a row, pledged his allegiance to King Charles I (later to become Emperor Charles V) and was given a new name: Hernando de Magallanes. The English- speaking world, which reveres him quite as much as does Iberia, knows him as Ferdinand Magellan. He set off on September 20, 1519, with a royal mandate to search for a passage to El Mar del Sur, and thus determine for certain that the Spice Islands were within the Spanish domains. He had not the foggiest notion of how far he might have to travel. For all Magellan's 237 men in their five little ships knew, Balboa's Panama and the northern coast of South America, which Columbus had sighted in 1498 on his third voyage, might be the equatorial portions of a continent extending without a break to the Antarctic pole, making the southern sea they sought quite unreachable from the west. Johann Schoner's globe of the world, then the best known, placed Japan a few hundred miles off Mexico. The historian Lopez de Gomara asserts that Magellan always insisted that the Moluccas were "no great distance from Panama and the Gulf of San Miguel, which Vasco Nunez de Balboa discovered." Magellan would rapidly discover precisely what "no great distance" was to mean. The five vessels that would soon make historythe Victoria, the Trinidada (the Trinidad), the San Antonio, the Concepcion and the Santiagowere small, the largest being 120 tons, and hopelessly unseaworthy. ("I would not care to sail to the Canaries in such crates," wrote the Portuguese consul in Seville, with obvious pleasure. "Their ribs are soft as butter.") They set sail from the Guadalquivir River under the proud corporate title of the Armada de Molucca, amply armed but hopelessly provisioned, with crews composed of men of nine different nationalities including a lone Englishman. There was one Moluccan slave, Enrique, who would act as an interpreter if the crossing was accomplished. There was a journalist, too, Antonio Francesca Pigafetta, who may have been a Venetian spy. In any case, Pigafetta's diaries remained the source for all future accounts of the voyage; he had joined the ships, he said, because he was "desirous of sailing with the expedition so that I might see the wonders of the world." The sorry tales of sodomy and mutiny, of yardarm justice and abrupt changes of command, and of all the other trials that attended the armada on its path south and west across the Atlantic do not belong here. The truly important phase of the journey starts on February 3, 1520, when the vessels left their anchorage near today's Montevideo and headed south. No charts or sailing directions existed then. The sailors were passing unknown coasts, and confronting increasingly terrifying seas and temperatures that dropped steadily day by day. They began to see penguins"ducks without wings," they called them, patos sin alasand "sea-wolves," or seals. Seeking a way to the Pacific, they explored every indentation in the coast off which they sailed, and with depressing regularity each indentationeven though some were extremely capacious and tempted the navigators to believe that they might be the longed-for straitsproved to be a cul-de-sac. They spent much of the winter, from Palm Sunday until late August, in the center of a chilly and miserable bay at what is now Puerto San Julian. The winter was made doubly wretched by an appalling mutiny and the consequent executions and maroonings that Captain-General Magellan ordered; by the wrecking of the Santiago, which he had sent on a depth- sounding expedition; and by the realization of the dreadful damage done to the remaining ships by the chomping of those plank- gourmets of the seas, teredo worms. But one important discovery was made at Puerto San Julian: these southern plains were inhabited by enormous nomadic shepherds who herded not sheep, but little wild llamas known as guanacos, and who dressed in their skins. Magellan captured a number of these immense peopleone pair by the cruel trick of showing them leg- irons and insisting that the proper way to carry the shackles was to allow them to locked around their ankles. Magellan's men also liked the giants' tricks: one, who stayed aboard only a week but allowed himself to ba called Juan and learned some biblical phrases, caught and ate all the rats and mice on board, to the pleasure of the cook and the entertainment of the men. Magellan called these men "patagones""big feet"; the land in which he found them has been known ever since as Patagonia. By late August the fleet set sail again. Two men had been left behind, marooned for mutiny by Magellan's orders. They had a supply of wine and hardtack, guns and shot, but when other, later expeditions entered the bay, no trace of them was found. They may have been killed by the giants; they may have starved to death. All that the men of the armada remembered were their pitiful wails echoing over the still waters as the ships sailed out of the bay into the open sea, and then south. By the time the flotilla had reached 50 degrees south latitude (not far from the Falkland Islands), the men were restive. Their artless plea now was: If the expedition wanted to reach the Spice Islands, why not turn east toward them and pass below the Cape of Good Hope, as others had? Magellan, sensible enough to know this would make a nonsense of the whole plan to render the Spice Islands Spanish, refused. But he promised that if no strait was found by the time they had eaten up another 25 degrees of latitude, he would turn east as they wished. The murmurs stilled. The Captain- General clearly had no idea of the utter impossibility of navigating at 75 degrees south latitude, for on that longitudinal track his ships would get stuck fast in the thick ice of what is now the Weddell Sea, hemmed in by the yet unimagined continent and the unendurable cold of the Antarctic. The Captain-General sights a virgin cape On October 21, 1520, Magellan sighted a headland to starboard. Cabo Virjenes, which today is equipped with a lighthouse that flashes a powerful beam and a radio direction beacon, is an important navigation point on the South American coast. It marks, as Magellan was soon to discover, the eastern end of the strait that bears his namethe tortuous entrance, at long last, to the Pacific. Ranges of immense, show-covered mountains crowded into view; there could be, Magellan must have thought, no possible exit. Still, he ordered the San Antonio and the Concepcion into the headwaters of the bayonly to be horrified when he saw them being swept into a huge maelstrom of surf and spindrift by unsuspected currents and winds. But he had no time to dwell on such miseries, for an immense storm broke over his own ship, the Trinidad, as well as the Victoria, alongside. Men were hurled overboard. One vessel was dismasted; the other nearly turned turtle several times. The storm went on and on and on. When relief finally came to the exhausted crews, the only recourse, it seemed, was to turn tail and head for home. The expedition was over, an abject failure. Yet just at that moment (one occasionally suspects that the mythmakers have been at work on the story) the lookout sighted sails on the western horizon. They were indeed what they could only have been: the two scouting vessels had returned. Not shattered and aground, they were safe and sound. The joy Magellan must have felt at realizing his men were still alive was, however, as nothing when, as the San Antonio and the Concepcion drew closer, he saw their yardarms hung with bunting, music being played, and the crews dancing and singing. As an account of the long voyage puts it, "Suddenly, they saw a narrow passage, like the mouth of a river, ahead of them in the surf, and they managed to steer into it. Driven on by wind and tide they raced through this passage and into a wide lake. Still driven by the storm they were carried west for some hours into another narrow passage, though now the current had reversed, so what appeared to a great ebb tide came rushing towards them. They debouched from this second strait into a broad body of water which stretched as far as the eye could see toward the setting sun...." By tasting the water and finding it salty, and then making sure that both the ebb tides and flood tides were of equal strength (tests that argued against this body of water being a river), the captains of the scout ships realized they had, indeed, discovered the way through. Magellan, believing that his ultimate goal was within his grasp, brushed aside the persistent doubter's view that he should, despite the discovery, turn back eastward for the Moluccas. "Though we have nothing to eat but the leather wrapping from our masts," he declared, "we shall go on!" The Strait of Magellan is as darkly beautiful as it is useful. Before I first visited the strait I supposed, wrongly, that since its latitude to the south is more or less the same distance from the Equator as Maine's latitude is to the north, the coastline would also be vaguely similar. But it is much starker, more hostile, more grand. Heading west, as Magellan did, the land begins flat, and wind reduces such trees as there are to stunted survivors. Even today the strait is not an easy place for sailing vessels: "... both difficult and dangerous, because of incomplete surveys, the lack of aids to navigation, the great distance between anchorages, the strong current, and the narrow limits for the maneuvering of vessels," says the pilot manual. "A cargo of falsehood against Magellan" For Magellan and his men it was a nightmare. The currents were treacherous. Unexpected winds, now known as williwaws, flashed down steep cliffs, threatening to drive the little fleet onto the rocks. He lost another ship; though he did not know it at the time, the San Antonio had turned tail and was heading back to Spain, "bearing a cargo of falsehood against Magellan." She also took away supplies vital for all of the fleetone-third of the armada's biscuits, one-third of its meat and two-thirds of its currants, chickpeas and figs. The men began begging to turn back. Days passed. Finally, on November 28, 1520, Trinidad, Victoria and Concepcion passed beyond the horrors of the strait, and sailed westward into an evening that became, suddenly, magically serene. We are told that "the iron-willed Admiral" broke down and cried. Then he assembled his men on deck. Pedro de Valderrama, the Trinidad's priest, stood on the poop deck and called down on the crew of all three remaining vessels the blessing of Our Lady of Victory. The men sang hymns. The gunners fired broadsides. And Magellan proudly unfurled the flag of Castile. "We are about to stand into an ocean where no ship has ever sailed before," Magellan is said to have cried (though it has to be emphasized that there is no hard evidence that he did so). "May the ocean be always as calm and benevolent as it is today. In this hope I name in the Mar Pacifico." And just in case it was not Magellan who first uttered the name, then perhaps it was Pigafetta: "We debouched from that strait," he later wrote, "engulfing ourselves in the Pacific Sea." The European dawn breaks on the Pacific The concept of the Pacific Ocean, the greatest physical unit on Earth, had been born. Balboa had seen it. D'Abreu had ventured onto its western edges. Magellan had reached its eastern periphery. Now it was up to the explorers to try to comprehend the enormity of their discovery. But before they could do that, Magellan had to sail across it. This was his determined aim, and the aim of those who sponsored his venture. So the Captain-General ordered the sails set to carry the shrunken, but now at long last triumphant, armada northward. He thought it might take three or four days to reach the Spice Islands. It was a savage underestimatea tragically optimistic forecast, based quite probably on the terrible inability of long- distance navigators to calculate longitude (an inability that insured that not a single estimate then available to Magellan was even 80 percent of the true size of the ocean). Not that anyone suspected tragedy as they breezed to the north of Cape Desado. Far from it. Once the armada had reached the lower southern latitudes, the winds began to blow balmily and unceasingly from the southeast. They were trade winds, just like those well known in the southern Atlantic and Indian oceans, and they were pleasantly warm. Their effect produced nothing but splendid sailing: no undue swells, no angry squalls, no cyclonic outbursts. Just endless days and nights of leisured running before a steady, powerful breeze. "Well was it name Pacific," wrote Pigafetta later, confirming his master's choice of name, "for during this period we met with no storms." And for weeks and weeks, simply by wafting before the winds with sails unchanged, the fleet managed to miss every single one of the islands with which the Pacific Ocean is littered. Magellan's course, sedulously recorded by his pilot, Francisco Albo, shows himalmost uncannilyleading his vessels past the Juan Fernandez Islands, past Sala y Gomez and Easter islands, past Pitcairn, Ducie, Oeno and Henderson and, indeed past everything else. His astrolabe, his crude speed recorder, his hourglass (a watchkeeper would be flogged for holding it against his chest, since to warm it made the sand flow faster, the hour pass more quickly, the watch be more rapidly over) served Magellan admirably: he plotted the likely course to the Spice Islands, and his ships took him there, more or less. Any deviation could have caused disaster. Had he strayed just 3 degrees north of Albo's recorded track, he would have hit the Marquesas; 3 degrees south, he would have come to Tahiti. He was a hundred miles off Bikini Atoll. He passed within a half day's sailing of razor-sharp coral reefsthundering surfs, huge spikes and lances that would have ruined his ships forever. At this distance in time, it seems as if some guardian angel had Magellan's tiny fleet under benevolent invigilation for days and nights too numerous to count. Yet this providence has a less kindly face. Six weeks out of the strait, Magellan's men began to die. In the monotony of a long, landless passage, what proved unbearable was the lack of food aboard the sea-locked ships. Much of the stores had already gone, carried off on the treacherous San Antonio. Such food as the three ships carried began to rot under the soggy tropical airs. The penguins and seals they had killed and salted in Patagonia started to turn putrid; maggots raged through the ships, eating clothes and supplies and rigging; water supplies turned scummy and rank. Men began to develop the classic symptoms of scurvytheir teeth loosened in their gums, their breath began to smell horribly sour, huge boils erupted from their shrunken frames, they sank into inconsolable melancholia. In January men began to die. One of the Patagonian behemoths whom Magellan had persuaded aboard was, despite his immense physique and power, the first to go; he begged to be made a Christian, was baptized "Paul" and then died. By mid-January a third of the sailors were too sick to stagger along the decks. Their food was limited to scoops to flour stained yellow by the urine of rats, and biscuits riddled with weevils. The depression and deep anxiety afflicted Magellan too. At one point he flung his charts overboard in a fit of rage. "With the pardon of the cartographers, the Moluccas are not to be found in their appointed place!" he cried. The fleet did, in fact, strike land in late Januarya tiny island they called St. Paul's, and which seems to be the minute atoll now known as Pukapuka, in the French Tuamotu group. (Four centuries later, Pukapuka was the first island to be spotted by Thor Heyerdahl aboard the balsa raft Kon-Tiki after his long drift westward from Callao in Peru.) They stayed a week, replenishing their water butts and feasting on turtle eggs. They left in an optimistic mood; surely, they surmised, this island must be the first of a vast skein of atolls and lagoons stretching to the now close Moluccas. But it was not to be; the ships had barely traversed a third of their ocean. Soon the hunger pains, the racking thirst and the sense of unshakable misery began anew, and the dying began once more. After meals of leatherland! More and more terrible the voyage steadily became. By March 4 the flagship had run out of food completely. Men were eating the oxhides and llama skins used to prevent the rigging from chafing (not too bad a dietso long as the crew's scurvy-ridden teeth hung in). The smell of death, the knowledge that it was both inevitable and impending, gripped Magellan's sailors. And then dawned March 6, when a seaman called Navarro, the only man still fit enough to clamber up the ratlines, spied what everyone was waiting for land. A great cheer went up. Cannon were fired. Men fell to their knees in prayer. A squadron of tiny dugouts sped from shore to meet the Spaniards. Magellan had reached the islands he first called Las Islas de las Velas Latinas and later, after much of his cargo had been filched, Las Islas de Ladrones, the Islands of Thieves. He had made his landfall at what we now call Guam. It was March 6, 1521. Magellan had crossed the Pacific. A voyage the Captain-General had supposed might take three or four days had, in fact, occupied three and a half months. The fleet stayed in Guam for only three daysto rest, make minor repairs and take on food (such as the "figs, more than a palm long," which must have been bananas) and fresh water. Then Magellan set off, still toward the Moluccas, standing down for the southwest and to the Philippines, islands of which all travellers to these parts had often heard, but which no European had ever seen. Though the Spice Islands, it must e recalled, were the armada's prescribed goal, the official mandate and ambition of Magellan was to discover, name and seize in the name of Spain the immense archipelago that lay north of them. The only Briton on the expedition, Master Andrew of Bristol, died on this last, short passage. He was never to see the islands that, a novelist was later to write, were "as fair as Eden, with gold beaches, graceful palms, exotic fruits and soil so rich that if one snapped off a twig and stuck in into the ground it would start straightway to grow." Magellan made his landfall on March 16 on an island at the southern end of the large Philippine island of Samar. Two days later, the first contact was made with Filipinos, though the name "Philippines" was not to be given to the place until 1543, when explorer Ruy Lopez de Villalobos named one after the Infante, later to become King Philip II, the Spanish monarch whose reign made the words "Spanish Armada" infamous. (The name "Philippines" caught on later to mean the entire island group.) The significant moment came two days later still, when the ships sailed down the Gulf of Leyte and the Surigao Strait, where, more than four centuries later in World War II, one of the world's last great naval battles was fought, and Adm. William F. Halsey reduced the Japanese Imperial Navy to vestigial strength. Once through the strait, Magellan landed at the island that guarded its entrance, Limasawa. Eight inhabitants sailed out to the Trinidad in a small boat. On orders from the Captain-General, his Moluccan slave, Enrique, hailed them. In a moment that must have seemed frozen in time, it became clear that the men in the approaching boat understood the words of the Moluccan perfectly. Their language was being spoken to them by a man on a huge ship that had come to them from the east. The linguistic globe even if not necessarily the physical globehad been circumnavigated. A man who had originated in these parts had traveled across Asia and around Africa to Europe as a slave, and had now returned home by the Americas and the Pacific. Enrique de Molucca may well have been, strictly speaking, the first of humankind to circumnavigate the world; he was never to be honored for so doing. Nor, by the unhappy coincidence of ill-temper and wretched misfortune, was Ferdinand Magellan ever to be able to savor his own triumph. Just six weeks after the landing he was dead, cut down on a Philippine island in a skirmish that is as unremembered as the place in which it happened is unsunga flat and muddy little island called Mactan, where an airport has now been built to serve the city of Cebu. The circumstances of the Captain-General's end, however, are riven into every Iberian schoolchild's learning, even today. Despite his crew's objections, Magellan insisted on exploring. He was pleased at the relative ease with which the people took to Christianity. (It is perhaps worth remembering that the Catholic faith, which Magellan and his priests brought to Samar and Cebu and northern Mindanao, flourishes there still today. The Philippines, in fact, is the only predominantly Christian country in Asia, and the influence of the church contributed significantly to the recent overthrow of President Ferdinand Marcos.) But the successful sewing of the seeds of Christianity were to be Magellan's undoing. His horribly unglorious end came in late April. The precise circumstances were chronicled. Magellan had demonstrated what he felt was his superior status to the local raja of Cebu, and had made Christians of him and all his followers. But significantly, the rest of the Philippine nobility did not go along. Many local junior rajas objected, especially the minor raja of Mactan, a man named Cilapulapu and now known to all Filipinos simply as Lapu Lapu. He declared that he was not going to pay fealty to this Christian interloper, come what may. He cared little enough for the raja of Cebu, let along the Cebuano's newfound foreign friends. The Spaniards soon got wind of this rebellious mood, and on April 27 Magellan and 60 of his men paddled across the narrow strait to Mactan in an attempt to bring Lapu Lapu to heel. "You will feel the iron of our lances," Lapu Lapu was told by Magellan's interlocutor. "But we have fire-hardened spears and stakes of bamboo," replied a defiant chieftain. "Come across whenever you like." The last stand at Mactan Island The waters at the northern end of Mactan are very shallow and degenerate into warm swamps. A selected 48 of the Spaniards, dressed in full armor, had to wade the last few hundred yards to do battle with the Mactan warriors. They fought for an hour, thigh-deep in the water. Then Magellan plunged his lance into the body of an attacker and was unable to withdraw it quickly enough. It was a fatal delay. Another islander slashed Magellan's leg with a scimitar. He staggered. Scores of others crowded around him as he fell, and as Pigafetta was to write, "thus they killed our mirror, our light, our comfort and our true guide." It is worth remembering that Fernao de Magalhaes was a native Portugueseof whom it used to be said, because they were such energetic explorers, "they have a small country to live in, but all the world to die in." There is a monument near the spot where he fell, a tall white obelisk, guarded solicitously for the past 15 years by a man with the splendid name Jesus Baring. There are two accounts of the event, one engraved on either side of the cross. Senor Baring derives much amusement from showing his occasional visitorsand there are very few, considering how globally important this spot should behow markedly they differ. The one on the monument's eastern sidethe side that pedant geographers will recognize as marginally nearer to the Spanish Mainrecords the event as a European tragedy. "Here on 27th April 1521 the great Portuguese navigator Hernando de Magallanes, in the service of the King of Spain, was slain by native Filipinos...." On the other side, by contrast, it is seen as an Oriental triumph a heroic blow struck for Philippine nationalism. "Here on this spot the great chieftain Lapu Lapu repelled an attack by Ferdinand Magellan, killing him and sending his forces away...." Baring points to the later and roars with laughter. "This is the real story. This is the one we Filipinos like to hear!" Lapu Lapu is thus the first, and to many Filipinos the greatest, of Filipino heroes. These days his memory is being revived, his exploits retold, his adventures made the stuff of comic strips, films and popular songs. Each April there is a full- scale reenactment of the Battle of Mactan on the beach, with an improbably handsome Cebuano film star playing the part of the seminaked hero and, when I was last there, the Philippine Air Force officer Mercurion Fernandez playing the role of the armor-clad Magellan. The two sides struggle gamely in the rising surf until that epic moment when Officer Fernandez contrives to collapse into the shallow sea and grunts his last. The assembled thousands then cheer. Such is Filipino pride in the raja of Mactan that there are firebrandsin Manila as well as in Cebuwho believe their country should shed its present name, a reminder that it is a colonial conquest, and be reborn as LapuLapuLand. Little more needs to be said of the tiny armada now, save to note what most popular historians choose to forget. The Concepcion was scuttled; the flagship Trinidad, which tried to make for home via the Pacific once more, was blown north as far as Hakodate in Japan, captured by a Portuguese battle group and became a total loss in the Spice Islands, which had been its original goal. But one of the ships, the doughty little Victoriaat 85 tons she was the second smallest of the original fivedid make it back to Spain. The Victoria scudded home under the charge of Juan Sebastian d'Elcano, previously the executive officer of the Concepcion. She made Java. She made it round the top of Africa, through waters where freak waves sometimes cause modern oil tankers to founder. She made the Cape Verde Islands, where the crew realized that despite meticulous log-keeping, they had lost an entire day from their calendar: the concept of crossing the international date line was unknownand profoundly unimaginableto them. On September 6, 1523, the Victoria made the harbor of Sanlucar de Barrameda, from where she had set off almost exactly three years before. Juan Sebastian d'Elcano had brought just 17 men back with him: 237 had started out. Circumnavigation, it happened, was a most costly business. But well rewarded. D'Elcano was given an annual pension and a coat of arms as handsome as it was aromatic: a castle, three nutmegs, 12 cloves, two crossed cinnamon sticks, a pair of Malay kings bearing spice sticks, and above all, a globe circled by a ribbon emblazoned with the motto 'Primus Circumdedisti me.' "Thou first circumnavigated me."

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