Bartolomeu Dias was a Portuguese explorer who became the first European to reach Indian Ocean from the Atlantic
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Bartolomeu Dias was a Portuguese explorer who became the first European to reach Indian Ocean from the Atlantic
Bartolomeu Dias born at
He was married and had two children, Simão Dias de Novais and António Dias de Novais.
Bartolomeu Dias perished on the second Indian expedition in which he was one of the captains. Four ships in the expedition, including his own, encountered a violent storm while attempting to travel around the Cape of Good Hope in 1500 and were lost. Dias died in the storm along with the other occupants of the ill-fated ships.
Almost nothing is known about Bartolomeu Dias’ childhood and early life. It is believed that he was born around 1450, in Algarve, Kingdom of Portugal. His parentage is also not known.
Dias was employed as a knight of the royal court. He also served as the superintendent of the royal warehouses, and sailing-master of the man-of-war, ‘São Cristóvão’ (Saint Christopher). It is believed that he was an experienced sailor.
King John II of Portugal ascended the throne in 1481 and focused on the exploration of the coasts of Africa in order to seek new trade routes to Asian countries that would enable Portugal to establish foreign trade with prosperous nations like India. He appointed many navigators to embark on expeditions to explore new routes and stake the claims of the Portuguese crown in newly discovered lands.
In 1487, the king appointed Bartolomeu Dias to lead an expedition in search of a sea route to India. The king had heard of a legendary Christian priest and ruler ruler called Prester John who was rumored to rule over a vast kingdom in Ethiopia. Dias was also entrusted with discovering the lands ruled by Prester John.
He set sail around August 1487. Dias’s fleet consisted of three ships: his own São Cristóvão, the São Pantaleão, and a square-rigged support ship. His crew included some of the leading pilots of the day like Pêro de Alenquer and João de Santiago, who had been on previous expeditions to the African continent. The expedition party also included six Africans who had been brought to Portugal by earlier explorers.
The men sailed south along the West coast of Africa and collected extra provisions on the way at the Portuguese fortress of São Jorge de Mina on the Gold Coast. As the ships sailed off the coast of South Africa, they encountered violent storms but somehow managed to survive and continue the expedition.
Bartolomeu Dias is credited with exploring the rocky headland on the Atlantic coast of the Cape Peninsula, South Africa, which later became known as the Cape of Good Hope. His discovery of the passage around the cape was a milestone in the attempts by the Portuguese to establish direct trade relations with the Far East.