Showing posts with label Vasco da Gama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vasco da Gama. Show all posts

Thursday, May 3, 2012

When did South Africa's history begin?



Jan van Riebeeck
When I grew up, I was taught that South African history started with the arrival of Johan Anthonisz "Jan" van Riebeeck in early April 1652.  His charge by the Dutch East India Company (DEIC – or as the Dutch called it, Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie - VOC) was to set up a way-station to supply passing company ships with fresh produce and water.  What we learnt about pre-Van Riebeeck southern Africa could have been written (in tiny letters) on a postage stamp.  Namely:


Van Riebeeck arrives in Table Bay
In 1488, Bartolomeu Dias sailed around the Cape, which opened up the possibility of trade with the east without going overland.
In 1497, Vasco da Gama sailed around the Cape to open up the trade route.
In 1503, Antonio de Saldanha named the area around what is now known as Cape Town as “Agoada do Saldanha” – The watering place of Saldanha.  (People do like to name places after themselves.)
Jan van Riebeeck
(You can read why South Africa never became a Portuguese colony at http://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=1990338437877873686#editor/target=post;postID=5491224666417113269)
In 1620, Englishman, Humphrey Fitzherbert claimed the area around Cape Town for King James.  King James wasn’t interested.
Before the Europeans came, there was an indigenous population of Khoikhoi people, sometimes called Hottentots, living in the area around Table Mountain.
Van Riebeeck immediately set about to build a fortification to protect the Dutch from the Khoikhoi, as well as planting vegetables and fruit and acquiring meat through barter or hunting.  It is also no coincidence that a few months after he arrived, England and Holland had gone to war, and the DEIC wanted to protect its investment.
Van Riebeeck and men meet Khoikhoi
He also planted a Wild Almond hedge around the settlement, some of which is still growing in the National Botanical Gardens at Kirstenbosch.  I have to say that it would be very difficult to crawl through it.  Overall, he was a good Commander of the Cape for the DEIC, which is not surprising that he was on his best behaviour, since he was probably lucky to get the post as he had been caught trading for his own account when he headed the DEIC trading post in Tonkin, Vietnam.
After naming several small villages after himself, Riebeeck’s Kasteel and Riebeeck Wes, he left the Cape in 1662 after two five-year contracts, and eventually died in what is now Jakarta in 1667.
Shaka kaSenzangakhona
What really interests me about Van Riebeeck is that his arrival is, or was, regarded as when history started in South Africa.  And the only reason for that is that he was a bureaucrat.  He kept records and diaries, so we know what happened and when.  There are no written or even oral records of the Khoikhoi’s history, so their history is disregarded.  Reminds me of Columbus ‘discovering’ America.
We only know about the earlier visits to the Cape by Europeans because they too were bureaucrats, keeping sailing logs and diaries and records.
None of the indigenous peoples of southern Africa have similar written records and, for the most part, oral records are sketchy at best.  We know about the great Zulu or Mtethwa chiefs, such as Dingiswayo or Shaka or Ceteswayo, because of European records, not indigenous ones.
Khoi man
And we know nothing of the histories or stories of the Khoikhoi or KhoiSan peoples.  And we probably will never find out, other than through speculations of anthropologists.
All I hope is that today’s South African children are taught a more indigenous perspective of their country’s history, although I am not entirely sure how it could be done.
Stan - Thursday

Monday, April 23, 2012

The Men Who Discovered America


Some readers have written to say they appreciate posts on Brazilian history. But this one, in terms of scope, is more ambitious than any that preceded it. So, after having written it once, I re-wrote it, simplified it, and included a number of links for those of you who would like to know more.
Here goes:
In my youth, if you’d have asked any little girl in the United States who discovered the New World, she would have told you it was a Spanish crew, under a Genoese navigator, Christopher Columbus, and many could have added a date: October 12th, 1492.

These days, of course, we know that the European's discovery of North America should actually be credited to the Norwegians, who established short-lived colonies there in the earliest years of the eleventh century.
Similarly, most Brazilian schoolchildren will tell you their country was discovered by Pedro Alvarez Cabral. It may be true (more on that subject at the end of this post) but, even if it is, it wouldn’t have happened had it not been for three of Cabral’s predecessors – and a fortuitous accident.
Here’s the story:

It all started with this guy, the third son of John the First of Portugal and his English wife, Philippa of Lancaster. They baptized him Henry, and we know him today as Henry “the Navigator”.
In fact, he never navigated anything. But he did have an intense interest in the art and science that it entailed, and he patronized many voyages. In Henry’s day, exploration of the coast of Africa hadn’t gone much further than Cape Bojador, located a little over a hundred nautical miles south of the Canary Islands.
But Henry, obsessed with finding the legendary Christian kingdom of Prester John and also getting his country’s hooks into the West African gold trade, commissioned the construction of caravels.

These were newer and lighter ships better-suited to long-range exploration than the heavy Mediterranean vessels that preceded them. And he encouraged his captains to strike ever further southward.
Henry died without ever having learned that there was a way around the tip of Southern Africa. But his work, supported by the kings who followed, continued. And, in 1488, twenty-eight years after Henry’s death, the Portuguese achieved a striking success.

Bartolomeo Dias rounded what he called the Cape of Storms and was able to turn the bow of his ship northward.
Dias wanted to continue on to India, but his crew refused to go further and he was forced to turn back. Upon his return to Lisbon, John II, renamed the place the Cape of Good Hope, because of the promise it offered of a sea route to the East. But, European concerns caused the Portuguese to suspend their explorations for the next ten years. And it wasn’t until July of 1497 that the next fleet set sail.
This time, under the command of this fellow:

Vasco da Gama.
After many privations and adventures Gama returned, two years later, to report that he’d managed to make it all the way to India. And he was heaped with rewards and honors by King Manuel I.

Enter Pedro Alvarez Cabral, the next man up.
Cabral set sail with a fleet of thirteen ships at noon, on the ninth of March, 1500. The object of his undertaking was to return with valuable spices and to establish trade relations in India—bypassing the monopoly on the spice trade then in the hands of Arab, Turkish and Italian merchants.
It was the custom, in those days, to appoint a member of the nobility to command the fleets, but they were often men without maritime experience (as in this case) so decisions of a nautical nature were left to more-experienced captains and pilots, most of them commoners.
By that time, the Portuguese navigators had already become aware of the trade winds that prevail in the Atlantic, and they sailed west, to take advantage of them, before turning south and then eastward again toward the Indian subcontinent.
They did not, however, have an accurate system for measuring longitude.

That was a development that came about only two-and-a-half centuries later, with the development of the marine chronometer.
So they wound-up sailing too far. And, on the twenty-second of April, less than seven weeks after having first set sail, they bumped into Brazil and claimed it for Portugal.

And that remains the official history as far as most Brazilians are concerned.
But is it true?
Well, maybe.
But some historians claim that Duarte Pacheco Pereira got there first, maybe as early as November of 1498.


And others think it was Vicente Yáñez Pinzón, who might have arrived just three months before Cabral did.
Ah, for the good old days. When it was all so simple.
Leighton - Monday