Age of Discovery: Difference between revisions

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** [<nowiki/>[[wikipedia:Bacalhau|Bacalhau (portuguese salted cod, wiki)]]]
** [<nowiki/>[[wikipedia:Bacalhau|Bacalhau (portuguese salted cod, wiki)]]]
** [[https://portoalities.com/en/why-are-portuguese-obsessed-with-cod/ Why are Portuguese Obsessed with Cod (portoalities.com)]]
** [[https://portoalities.com/en/why-are-portuguese-obsessed-with-cod/ Why are Portuguese Obsessed with Cod (portoalities.com)]]
** lanteen sails
** lateen sails
*** lanteen dervivced from Latin for Roman style triangle sails << to confirm  
*** "lateen" derived from Latin for Roman style triangle sails << to confirm  
**** which were serviced from Arab/ Indian Ocean sails << to confirm
**** which were serviced from Arab/ Indian Ocean sails << to confirm



Revision as of 23:42, 15 February 2024

Age of Discovery

Sailing & exploration technologies[edit | edit source]

magnetic compass[edit | edit source]

  • a magnetized needle or, originally, "spoon," that can freely rotate on a hard surface, pin, or in water
    • its magnetic tip will rotate to point north or south
  • a compass is used for navigation
    • as it can indicate a boat's direction without knowing the time of day or in poor weather or the dark
  • invented in China, the compass spread to the middle east and Europe by the 13th century
    • the first Chinese compasses were made with "lodestone"
      • = naturally magnetized iron stone
  • iron needles were later used by magnetizing their point with a lodestone
    • the needle could be suspended in water, and it would turn to point to one of the earths' magnetic poles (north or south)
  • it is possible that the Europeans had a distinct invention of the compass
    • either way, they adapted the "dry compass"
    • = suspending the magnetized needle on a pin so that it could rotate freely
  • click EXPAND for a late 12th century description of an early compass by Alexander Neckam, an Englishman who worked with magnetics:
  • use of the compass greatly facilitated long-distance ocean travel
    • and allowed for creation of accurate maps

Scurvy[edit | edit source]

  • a deadly condition resulting from a lack of Vitamin C
  • on long voyages, European ships generally carried for food:
    • salted pork or other meats, called "jerky"
    • salted hard bread, called "hardtack"
    • these foods are "cured" by salt or cooking/ drying / smoking in order to remain edible over long voyages
      • salt "cures" food by removing water and destroying bacteria
      • cooking preserves bread by removing bacteria and water
  • scurvy was accepted as an unavoidable condition sailors would face on long distance voyages
  • however, tropical fruits and their juices, especially lemon and lime, have a long "shelf life" and have high concentrations of Vitamin C
  • by the time of Vasco de Gama's expedition around Africa, Portuguese explorers were aware of the ability of citrus to prevent scurvy
    • nevertheless, de Gama and other explorers lost over half and sometimes almost all of their crew (sailors) to scurvy
    • Europeans continued to think that scurvy was a "digestive" disease and ignored the curative effects of citrus
      • and not until the late 1750s did the British Royal Navy adopt the practice of giving sailor Vitamin C-rich lemon juice
  • in 1535, French explorer Jacques Cartier's crew was afflicted by scurvy during the first European winter stay in Canada
    • local Indians saved them by introducing them to brewed pine needles / pine buds
      • that Native Americans had traditionally used as a source of Vitamin C
    • Cartier brought this technology back to France, and it was adopted by other explorers
    • see Spruce beer

Portugal[edit | edit source]

Technologies & cultural experience in sailing[edit | edit source]

People & explorers[edit | edit source]

Henry the Navigator[edit | edit source]

Bartolomeu Dias[edit | edit source]

King Manuel I[edit | edit source]

Bartalemu[edit | edit source]

Vasco de Gama[edit | edit source]

  • Portugal sources:

https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Livro_das_Armadas https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Descobrimentos_portugueses

Sources[edit | edit source]

Mitchell]

    • this "web-book" has succinct, well-organized chapters in chronological order
    • can be an excellent and appropriate source for students