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Toda a História do Império Português

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    This is a map
    of the world's shipping lanes
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    showcasing the intricate network
    of maritime routes
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    that connect our modern world
    through global trade.
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    Although some of these routes
    were established in more recent times
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    such as the Suez and Panama canals,
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    most of these oceanic highways
    were chartered long ago
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    in an age where there was
    no reliable way of navigation
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    other than local knowledge
    and some rudimentary maps.
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    However, just over 500 years ago
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    at the beginning of the 16th century
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    these international trade routes
    did not even exist.
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    Only due to the emergence
    of the small Iberian nation of Portugal
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    as a maritime superpower,
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    were these connections
    to other parts of the world
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    made possible through their daring
    voyages and navigational prowess.
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    Portugal quickly established
    an empire for itself,
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    stretching from Africa, to Asia
    and South America.
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    These maritime exploits
    not only fueled Portugal's wealth.
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    an astonishing rise to power,
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    but also laid the foundation
    for the interconnected global economy
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    that we benefit from today.
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    But how did this relatively obscure nation
    on the edge of Europe emerged
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    to forge an Empire that would shape
    the course of History
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    for centuries to come?
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    This is the History
    of the Portuguese Empire.
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    All of our videos are available to watch
    ad free over on our substack page.
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    you can also read along
    to the original scripts
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    as well as listen to the audio generation
    as podcasts
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    by following the link
    in the video description below
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    and subscribing with your email.
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    Thank you.
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    The kingdom of Portugal emerged out
    of the series of events
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    known to History as the Reconquista
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    which was the the gradual reconquest
    of Christian lands
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    on the Iberian Peninsula
    from the Muslim Moors
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    who had invaded the territory
    far back in the 8th century,
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    having established itself
    as a sovereign kingdom
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    by the middle of the 12th century,
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    the Portuguese went on to push
    out the remaining Moors to the South
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    by capturing the territory
    of the Algarve in 1249,
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    effectively setting out the borders
    of their kingdom
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    along the same lines
    to which they exist today.
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    With their own territory secured
    from external threats
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    and the possibility of further expansion
    on the Iberian Peninsula ruled out
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    on account of their friendly relations
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    with the neighboring Christian
    kingdom of Castile to the east.
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    Portugal turned its attention
    towards the sea
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    and the possibility
    of exerting its own influence
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    upon both it and the lands
    that lay beyond in North Africa.
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    The year 1415 marked a pivotal
    moment in Portuguese expansion
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    for a decision was made to orchestrate
    an attack on the city of Ceuta,
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    which was held by the Marinid Sultanate.
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    Although many at the time
    considered this
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    nothing more than a continuation
    of the hostilities
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    between Christians and Muslims,
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    in reality it paved the way
    for the Portuguese
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    to expand their dominions
    and economic interests
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    beyond the Iberian Peninsula
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    and marked the beginning
    of the Portuguese Empire.
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    Despite capturing the city,
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    the Portuguese were not able
    to advance further into North Africa
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    as they had initially planned,
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    owing to determined resistance
    by local Muslim forces.
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    Nevertheless they continued
    to guarnison Ceuta
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    and used its harbor as a base
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    to explore the Atlantic
    coastline of Africa.
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    This policy of maritime exploration
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    was championed by a prominent figure
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    in the early days
    of the Portuguese Empire´:
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    Prince Henry, the Navigator.
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    He was curious to know
    how far the Muslim territories in Africa
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    extended Southward,
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    and whether it would be possible
    to reach Asia by an easterly sea route.
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    Consequently, scores of Portuguese ships
    began to set off into the Atlantic Ocean
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    and around the coast of North Africa
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    probing further and further into what
    were at the time uncharted waters.
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    The islands of Madeira and the Azores
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    were first cited in 1419 and 1427,
    respectively,
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    and were subsequently
    incorporated
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    as the latest additions
    to the expanding Portuguese Empire.
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    One of the first natural barriers
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    the Portuguese encountered
    on their explorations
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    was Cape Bojador.
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    The violent waters that surround it
    had claimed many vessels
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    that had previously tried to pass through
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    and it was widely deemed
    to be a point of no return.
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    That was until 1434,
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    when Gil Eanes successfully
    found the navigable passage
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    around the cape
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    and opened up further
    exploration South
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    towards subsaharan Africa.
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    No sooner had this feat been achieved
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    that the merchants of Lisbon
    began to search
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    for newer and more exotic markets
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    to which they could trade to.
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    gold, ivory, pepper, cotton and sugar,
    all from Africa,
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    soon became more commonplace
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    amongst the trading stools of Lisbon
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    as did the practice
    of selling African slaves
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    which began the long and
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    dark history of the transatlantic slave
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    trade that would continue for the next
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    400
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    years over the subsequent Decades of the
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    15th century the Portuguese ventured
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    further and further south down the coast
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    of Africa reaching the cape verdie
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    Islands in 1456 and the Gulf of Guinea
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    by the
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    1460s as they explored they left behind
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    a series of padro stone crosses engraved
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    with the Portuguese coat of arms marking
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    out their territorial claims which were
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    followed up with the construction of
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    forts and trading posts from these bases
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    they engaged profitably in the gold and
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    slave trades which they held a virtual
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    monopoly on for well over a
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    century the real prize for the
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    Portuguese Merchants however was a
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    supposed but as yet unconfirmed sea
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    route to Asia they hoped that the
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    discovery of such a route would allow
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    them direct access to the spice markets
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    of the Indies and bypass the expensive
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    Arab and Venetian Merchants who
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    controlled the Overland trade routes
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    through the Middle East and across the
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    Mediterranean into Europe then in 1488
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    news reached the ears of the Portuguese
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    authorities that Bartholomew di had
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    rounded the southern tip of Africa and
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    reached the Indian Ocean proving that
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    such an easterly passage did indeed
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    exist however this Revelation would soon
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    be eclipsed in magnitude Just 4 years
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    later when Christopher Columbus sailed
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    westwards across the Atlantic Ocean in
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    in search of his own theoretical route
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    to the Indies and in the process
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    inadvertently discovered an entirely New
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    World the discovery of the Americas
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    which Columbus claimed in the name of
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    Spain and initially believed to be part
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    of Eastern Asia quickly created a
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    problem for the two Iberian Nations not
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    knowing where one set of recently
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    discovered lands ended and another began
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    they consequently agreed to divide the
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    world in two spheres of influence
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    between themselves marked by a north
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    south line of Meridian roughly halfway
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    between the cape verie Islands
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    controlled by Portugal and the Caribbean
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    islands of the Americas which Columbus
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    had recently discovered and claimed for
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    Spain the Treaty of pesas ratified this
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    agreement in 1494 and effectively carved
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    the world in two with the lands to the
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    east of this line to be claimed solely
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    by Portugal and the lands to the West
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    claimed solely by
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    Spain with the dispute settled Portugal
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    could finally begin to undertake its
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    long-standing ambition of charting a sea
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    route to Asia and so on the 8th of July
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    1497 the Explorer Vasco de Gama left
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    Lisbon with a fleet of four ships and a
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    crew of 170 men Bound for the Indian
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    Ocean in search of Asia after a voyage
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    of some 10 months de's Expedition
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    finally made landfall on the Malibar
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    coast of India in May 1498 and
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    subsequently met with the zamorin or
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    king of Calicut to establish the trade
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    relations that they they had longed hop
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    for whilst the portuguese's arrival was
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    greeted with hospitality the local
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    Indian Traders found little value in the
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    Trinkets and commodities the Europeans
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    had brought with them to exchange and so
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    D's Expedition largely left empty-handed
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    their return Journey back to Portugal
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    took an agonizing amount of time owing
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    to the monsoon conditions they had to
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    face up at Sea which took an immense
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    toll on both the crew and the ships
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    nevertheless the survivors arrived back
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    in Lisbon during the summer of 1499 and
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    were given a hero's welcome despite the
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    me quantities of spices and other Goods
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    they had brought
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    back although the Expedition itself may
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    not have been profitable it demonstrated
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    that Maritime trade to Asia was possible
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    and had huge
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    potential the second expedition to India
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    set sail in 1500 under the command of
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    Pedro Alvarez Cabra although while
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    traversing across the Atlantic Ocean
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    sailed Too Far West and unexpectedly
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    reached the coast of what is now
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    Brazil although this discovery may have
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    been unintentional some speculation
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    suggests that the Portuguese may have
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    already been aware of Brazil's existence
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    and secretly knew that this part of
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    South America fell within their
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    designated territory according to the
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    Treaty of
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    tordas cabal recommended to the
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    Portuguese King Manuel the that the land
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    be settled and two follow-up voyages
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    were sent in 1501 and
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    1503 the land was found to be abundant
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    in brazilwood from which it later
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    inherited its name but the failure to
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    find gold or silver meant that for the
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    time being the Portuguese instead
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    decided to concentrate their efforts on
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    the invaluable trade out of
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    India as the first decade of the 16th
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    century progressed the Portuguese
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    ventured further into other parts of
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    Asia such as Sri Lanka and Indonesia
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    where they discovered the sources of
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    cinnamon and Nutmeg so valuable were
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    these Commodities that Alfonso de
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    Albuquerque the first appointed Vice Roy
    9:59
    of Portuguese India ordered the
Title:
Toda a História do Império Português
Description:

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Video Language:
Portuguese
Duration:
24:54

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