by Jeremy Beacock
On September 6, 1522, a
lone sailing ship with a
crew of 18 arrived in the Spanish port of Seville. It was the last
remaining ship of Ferdinand Magellan's
expedition to find a new way to the Spice Islands, but it was also the first ship ever to
circumnavigate the globe.
The expedition had
set off with 265 men in five ships three years before, and
initially, the journey went well. The
fleet reached South America in December 1519 and sailed south, resting for a year in
modern-day Argentina. However, before reaching the Pacific Ocean, two ships were lost. The expedition crossed the Pacific in four months, and in March 1521, the three remaining ships reached the Philippines. There, Magellan made a
fatal error when he
got involved in a
tribal feud between two local kings. The
ensuing battle
cost Magellan
his life.
The remaining sailors had to abandon the Concepcion and continued to sail the Victoria and the Trinidad
westward. In November 1521, they reached the Spice Islands, the goal of the expedition. The crew of the Trinidad decided to return via their original
route, but Juan Sebastián Elcano, the captain of the Victoria, continued west with his
cargo of spices.
The last part of the journey, however, was terribly difficult because the Victoria lost 20 crew members to
starvation, and Elcano had to
leave behind 13 more men while
fleeing the Portuguese. Nine months after leaving the Spice Islands and three years after leaving Spain, the Victoria
barely made it back to Seville and into the history books.
留言列表