Around the World
Magellan didn't know how far he had to go
There's the Magellan spacecraft, the first to thoroughly map Venus. There's a Magellan mutual fund, a Magellan healthcare insurance company, and dozens of other businesses and products all named in honor of the Portuguese explorer known as the first man to circumnavigate the globe. But that admiration may be misdirected. It seems that Ferdinand Magellan's slave, Enrique, was actually the first man to complete the circuit.
Enrique did not make the journey by choice, of course. Most likely born on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, Enrique was sold to Magellan in nearby Malacca in 1512, during one of the navigator's earlier voyages. When Magellan set off on his quest to find a passage through the Americas to the East Indies, Enrique was part of the crew, ending up back in Malacca nearly 10 years later. Having started far to the east, he thus completed his circumnavigation before anyone else aboard--let alone Magellan, who was killed in the Philippines and never made it home.
Worldview. Still, Magellan's tenacity--even fanaticism--vastly enlarged the world that Europeans knew. Laurence Bergreen, author of a new book about Magellan, Over the Edge of the World, says the difference between Christopher Columbus's jaunts across the Atlantic and Magellan's trip across the vast breadth of the Pacific was like the "difference between going to the moon and going to Mars." Along the way, Magellan discovered and somehow navigated the 330-mile labyrinth of fjords and bays we now call the Strait of Magellan and was the first to note the Pacific's critical trade winds. "This was the first modern voyage that gave us our sense of what the world was actually like," says Bergreen.
The voyage had unpromising beginnings. A former royal page who spent six years in the Portuguese Navy, Magellan returned home in 1514 to dim prospects. He failed to interest Portugal's King Manuel in his idea of discovering a South American shortcut to the elusive Spice Islands. So Magellan offered his plan to Portugal's rival, Spain, which needed a way to reach the Orient that avoided the Portuguese-controlled Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of Africa.
On Sept. 20, 1519, the 39-year-old capitan general and about 270 men set sail on five heavily laden ships: Trinidad, San Antonio, Concepcion, Victoria, and Santiago. They threaded between western Africa and the Canary and Cape Verde islands. Storms and the equatorial doldrums delayed the fleet, but by late November, they sighted Brazil. The tantalizing native women of Rio de Janeiro sparked an "unabated orgy" on board the ships, historian Tim Joyner says in his tome, Magellan. By Christmas Eve, though, a restless Magellan was pressing southward in search of a passage to the west.
The journey's next leg was a near disaster. As the fleet sailed down the east coast of South America through violent storms, Magellan considered anchoring to wait out the winter. To hoard supplies he began cutting rations, which prompted three of his officers to plot a mutiny. They failed, and an enraged Magellan had two quartered, their body parts skewered on poles. The other was left stranded on the shore.
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