One can find information about Bartolomeu Dias on the Bio True Story website. This site share relevant info about his life such as: birth date, occupation, nickname, etc.
Bartolomeu Dias went on a total of 2 expeditions...one of which was a journey to Africa
Dias was a captain who took a fleet of ships on a mission to control Muslim trade and one of his ships just happens to find a route from Portugal to India that went around the bottom of Africa
yes he had one girl named Siamo and a boy named Antonio.
saga
Bartolomeu Dias would've been taught several languages, physics, geometry, mathematics, and astronomy. At the age of 12, he was tutored by some of the most famous tutors around.-Doing this for fun, studying Bartolomeu Dias for a progect. :)
He made 1 voyage for the kingdom of Portugal.
Yes, Bartolomeu Dias had children. He married and had at least one son, named João Dias. The specifics about his family life are not extensively documented, but it is known that he left behind a family when he died during a voyage in 1500.
Dias was married and had two children ============== Bartolomeu Dias [c. 1450-May 29, 1500] left offspring, either from a marriage or from an involvement. He was a noble member of the royal household. At a young age, he came to Court to be educated. Chances are that the relationship was one of marriage, in which case there may be documentation within the Catholic Church. But the name of Dias' wife isn't known, other than perhaps in some archive in Portugal. It isn't something that has been passed down through the generations of a family line. For Dias' line went extinct with his great grandchildren, Dona Paula de Novais and Dona Violante de Castro, neither of whom married or had children. It's possible that Dias married a relative. For one of his two children was known as Antonio Dias de Novais, who married a relative.
Portugal did. Bartolomeu Dias was one of the first too.
He landed at the tip africa. It is know known as The Cape of Good Hope
The exact information may be available in an archive in Portugal. But historians in Portugal believe Bartolomeu Dias [c. 1450-May 29, 1500] to have been the descendant of a seafaring line. He may have been the relative of Dinis Dias, who was one of those navigators who has been credited with discovering the Cape Verde Islands in the mid-15th century. And Bartolomeu Dias may have been the relative of Joao Dias, who was among the first Portuguese explorers to prove that there was a sea route around and past Cape Bojador, in present Morocco. Historians list Diogo Dias aka Diogo Gomes, and Pero Dias, as brothers of Bartolomeu Dias. The former was one of those navigators who has been credited, along with Antonio Noli [1415-1497, or 1419-1491], aka Antonio da Noli and Antoniotto Usodimare, for discovering the Cape Verde Islands off the coast of Senegal. Information on Diogo under the last name of Gomes gives dates of about 1420, to about 1485 for him. If those dates are correct, then Diogo was about 30 years older than Bartolomeu. So Diogo may have been Bartolomeu's father, or a relative other than within the direct, nuclear family. Pero commanded the supply ship for the expedition that Bartolomeu Dias pioneered around the Cape of Good Hope, in 1487-1488. Sources tend to identify Pero as having discovered the Isle of St. Lawrence, or the present Madagascar, in 1500. But a few sources credit Diogo with that discovery. One of Bartolomeu's two sons was ka Simao Dias de Novais. Novais is a parish in Vila Nova de Famalicao, which is a municipality in the northern Portuguese district of Braga. The ending de Novais may indicate that the Dias' family home was originally there.
vasco da gama sailed around the cape of good hope but continued onto india, unlike dias who sailed around the cape of good hope but did not go further.