Simple answer:
Pedro Alvares Cabral is from Belmonte, Portugal.
Pedro Alvares Cabral is from Belmonte, Portugal.
When Vasco da Gama arrived in Lisbon in the fall of 1499, after going all the way to India and back again, he had good news for Portugal's King Manoel. The port cities of India were busy marketplaces for Asian products such as spices, gems, and medicinal herbs. The prince of the city of Calicut had reluctantly agreed to sell these products to the Portuguese, as well as to the Arab merchants with whom he usually did business.
Immediately King Manoel put together a trading expedition. The weary da Gama declined the honor of commanding it. In his place, the king chose a young nobleman, Pedro Alvares Cabral. On March 9, 1500, Cabral set sail from Lisbon with a fleet of thirteen ships manned by 1,500 sailors. One of his captains was Bartolomeu Dias, the veteran explorer who had been the first to go around the Cape of Good Hope. On board as special advisor was Gaspar of India, the master mariner whom da Gama had captured on his trip. [See the articles on Dias, da Gama, and Gaspar.]
Following the advice of da Gama and Dias, Cabralheaded in a wide curve toward the west, intending to come back eastward toward Africa when he was closer to the Cape of Good Hope. This maneuver was intended to help the expedition take advantage of the strongest winds. At the widest point of the curve, the sailors sighted land, to which Cabral gave the name Island of the True Cross. In fact, it was no island, but the coast of South America, where Brazil is now.
The Portuguese set up a cross and said a Mass before an audience of uncomprehending but friendly tribespeople. When they set sail again, they left behind two convicts who were assigned to learn the local language and convert as many people as they could. They were probably eaten instead, for these tribes practiced cannibalism.
No one knows for sure whether Cabral came to Brazil by mistake or by intention. Previous sailors had sighted land in that area, and the Portuguese had an agreement with Spain that gave Portugal all the land east of an imaginary line drawn at 46 degrees 37 minutes of longitude. Cabral may have had secret orders from King Manoel to see what he could find.
Cabral sent a ship back to the king with news of the discovery, and he and his fleet went on toward the Cape of Good Hope. This was the place that Bartolomeu Dias had wanted to call "Cabo Tormentoso," the Stormy Cape. As they approached it, they were hit by a hurricane that capsized four of the ships. Bartholomeu Dias was among the dead. One of the surviving ships was blown far to the east and eventually landed on the island of Madagascar, off the east coast of Africa, where no Europeans had ever been seen before. The other ships found their way around the Cape of Good Hope and were reunited some months later in Mozambique. They continued northwards along the east coast of Africa, headed for the city of Malindi (in present-day Kenya), whose ruler had given Vasco da Gama a promise of help for the Portuguese.
King Manoel had instructed Cabral to capture Muslim ships and take their cargoes. Cabral now began to carry out this part of his mission. The first two ships he captured he had to give back; they were owned by one of the cousins of the king of Malindi. To the king himself Cabral sent expensive gifts, and in exchange the king gave the crew fresh food. By mid-September the expedition had crossed the Indian ocean and arrived in Calicut.
Da Gama's old adversary, the Hindu prince of Calicut known as the Zamorin, seemed to be interested in Cabral's offer of trade. He gave the Portuguese a warehouse and a residence in the town. The group of merchants who had come with Cabralwent ashore to live there, together with three Catholic missionaries. The Arab merchants who had been trading in Calicut for years were not pleased at the new competition. On the night of December 16, they came in a mob several thousand strong, attacked the Portuguese living ashore, and killed most of them.
The furious Cabral ordered his sailors to capture ten Muslim ships from the harbor, confiscate their cargoes, burn them, and kill the 500 men who were aboard them. On one vessel were three elephants, which the Portuguese slaughtered and ate. Then they bombarded Calicut with cannon fire. With Gaspar of India steering the flagship, they sailed to the city of Cochin, burning two more Muslim ships along the way.
The king of Cochin was an old enemy of the Zamorin. He was happy to help Cabral stuff his ships with valuable goods--cinnamon, ginger, pepper, cloves, camphor, amber, opium, and myrrh, as well as pearls, rubies, diamonds, perfume, and fine cloth. The Portuguese sailed for home just as a fleet of warships arrived from Calicut to take revenge.
Cabral's fleet, minus two ships that had foundered on the way back, entered Lisbon in July 1501 with more good news for King Manoel. In addition to Cochin, the cities of Carangolos and Cannanore were willing to do business with him. If Portugal invested enough money and manpower, it might become as prosperous as Venice, which for centuries had controlled most of the trade between Europe and India. Cabral himself went back to his estate in eastern Portugal and lived there until his death in 1520.
Citation:
Pedro Álvares Cabral (ca. 1467-1520) was a Portuguese navigator who discovered Brazil on a voyage to India.
Born on the family estate in Belmonte, Pedro Álvares Cabral grew up close to the Portuguese court. As a nobleman, he served in the council of King Manuel I and received the habit of the Order of Christ. Little is known of his activities before 1499, when Manuel appointed him the chief captain of a fleet being prepared to sail to India to follow the maritime route to the East charted by Vasco da Gama on his historical voyage of 1497-1499.
Amid colorful pageantry 13 ships with 1,200 men sailed from the Tagus River on March 8, 1500, en route to India. On April 22 the fleet unexpectedly sighted land in the west at 17° South latitude. Cabral explored the coast and claimed the new land for his sovereign. He christened it Ilha de Vera Cruz. Merchants, quickly attracted to its plentiful stands of brazilwood, the source of an excellent red dye, called it Terra do Brasil, and the name Brazil gained popular acceptance.
Cabral's discovery has raised a series of historical questions which have never been properly answered. Was he the first to reach Brazil or had the Spanish or French made prior visits? Had Portugal previously discovered Brazil and protected that discovery with secrecy? Did Cabral--who was far off the prescribed course to India--discover Brazil accidentally or intentionally? There is room for much speculation on each of these questions, but lack of documentary evidence to the contrary leads to the conclusion that Cabral was the first to discover Brazil and that he did so accidentally. The first cartographic notification of Cabral's discovery was the Cantino chart, finished no later than 1502.
After dispatching news of his discovery to King Manuel, Cabral proceeded to India, where he established a trading post at Cochin. He then returned to Lisbon laden with the coveted spices of the East. He helped to prepare the next fleet for India, which sailed under the command of Vasco da Gama. Cabral then apparently retired to his estate at Jardim, near Santarém, where he died about 1520.
Pedro Alvares Cabral died on 1520
Pedro Alvares Cabral came from Portugal, Europe.
No.
No
Pedro Alvares Cabral married Isabel De Castro in 1503.
King Emanuel sponsored Pedro alveras cabral in 1499
who finaced Pedro A'lvares Cabral's trip
Pedro Alvares Cabral discover Brazil,Madagascar and Mozambique
Yes, he was.
Portugal
Brazil
yes