3 minute read

Vol. 19: Issue #27 • Famous Explorers • (7-2-2023) Tidbits of Coachella Valley

An explorer is defined as “one who travels to distant or unfamiliar previously unknown places.” This week, Tidbits breaks out the history books to recall these courageous individuals who stepped up to the challenge and braved high seas and treacherous treks to discover uncharted lands and unkown cultures.

ERIK THORVALDSSON

• Who was Erik Thorvaldsson? We know this tenthcentury Norse explorer better by his nickname Erik the Red, credited as having founded the first European settlement in Greenland.

An artist's rendition of famous Norse explorer Erik the Red.

• Born in Norway in 950 A.D., he earned his moniker for his ginger hair and fiery temper. He and his father had escaped from Norway, as his father was hunted for allegedly killing a man. Their exile trip wound them up on the island of Iceland. Erik himself later had to flee Iceland after being found guilty of murder. And so began a voyage that would lead him to discover a large landmass that would later be called Greenland.

Greenland is situated between Canada to the west, and Iceland to the east.

• Wanting to start a settlement in his newly found land, he returned to Iceland to recruit colonists. He called the island Greenland, believing that people would be convinced to move if the area had a favorable name. At the time, Iceland was in the midst of a severe famine and people were ready for a new opportunity. In 985, 25 ships set sail for Greenland, but tragically, 11 were lost at sea on the 900-mile journey over open ocean. About 350 people arrived safely, and the settlement eventually grew to more than 5,000. Erik the Red held the title of “paramount chieftain” of Greenland.

A statue of Leif Erikson, in Iceland.

• One of Erik the Red’s four children was also a famous explorer. Leif Erikson, also known as Leif the Lucky, is believed to have been the first European to have discovered the Americas, nearly 500 years before Christopher Columbus, when “in 1492 he sailed the ocean blue.” There is evidence that this 11th-century explorer established a Norse settlement in Newfoundland and explored the Gulf of St. Lawrence centuries before other explorers. Upwards of 800 Norse objects have been unearthed at the archaeological site known as L’Anse aux Meadows, on the northernmost tip of Newfoundland.

DAVID LIVINGSTONE

• Scottish explorer David Livingstone studied medicine in order to become a medical missionary, and departed for Africa in 1841 to pursue that purpose. He also had the goal of mapping rivers and lakes, including charting the Zambezi River all the way to the sea, as well as discovering the source of the Nile River.

David Livingstone, Christian missionary and explorer.

• After years of exploration, in 1855, he became the first European to see the colossal waterfall the natives had dubbed “Smoke that Thunders.” Livingstone named the spectacular landmark “Victoria Falls” after Queen Victoria.

Aerial view of the massive Victoria Falls, on the Zambezi River.

Located on the Zambezi River in southern Africa, the Falls are the world’s largest sheet of falling water, twice the height of Niagara Falls and more than twice the width.

• By 1856, Livingstone had crossed the African continent from west to east. Although he returned to England several times, during which he published books and articles.

• After his last trip back to England, all contact with him had been lost for more than four years. In 1869, Henry Morton Stanley, a special correspondent for the New York Herald, was commissioned by the paper to go find Livingstone. Two years later, in November 1871, Stanley found the doctor in Ujiji, a village on the shores of Lake Tanganyika in present-day Tanzania. Uncertain whether he was the man he was looking for, he famously asked, "Doctor Livingstone, I presume?"

• Livingstone spent most of his life in Africa, dying there in 1873 at age 60, deep in the wilderness. He was an outspoken abolitionist, having seen the tragic consequences of the slave trade and made monumental efforts to combat slavery of Africans. He also discovered the connection between malaria and mosquitoes, and advocated the use of quinine as a remedy for malaria. Ironically, it was malaria that took his life.

JACQUES CARTIER

• In 1534, French explorer Jacques Cartier was commissioned by the King of France to journey to the New World in search of gold, spices, and other riches, along with seeking a northwest route to Asia. He didn’t find Asia, but after a 20-day voyage with two ships and 61 men, he landed on Newfoundland. The ships sailed through the Gulf of St. Lawrence, where he became the first European to discover Prince Edward Island.

French explorer, Jacques Cartier.

• When he returned to France five months later, he was certain he had reached an Asian land. Another expedition followed the next year, a 14-month-long trek that resulted in 25 men dying of scurvy and a conflict with the previously-friendly Iroquois natives. One more voyage in 1541 brought Cartier to Quebec, which he claimed for France. He called the region “Kanata,” from the Iroquois word for “settlement,” a term later modified to title the entire country of Canada.

FERDINAND MAGELLAN

• Ferdinand Magellan was responsible for naming the Pacific Ocean, and was the first European to cross the Pacific. Seeking to establish a trade route in 1519, Magellan, along with 270 men and five ships, sailed from Sanlúcar de Barrameda in southern Spain, on what would become the first circumnavigation of the world. They sailed west across the Atlantic toward South America, landing at present-day Rio de Janeiro three months later. Ten months after that, his expedition discovered a sea route in southern Chile that was a natural passage between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, a passage that became known as the Strait of Magellan.

• Magellan anticipated a short journey to Asia from South America’s southern tip, believing it would be about four days. The crossing took over three-and-a-half months, during which time their food and water supplies were depleted, resulting in the deaths of 30 crew members, mostly from scurvy.

• Magellan’s fleet reached Guam in March 1521. Although Magellan’s expedition was the first to circumnavigate the Earth, the explorer himself did not make it back home. He was killed in a fight with the native people of Mactan Island in the Philippines. The remainder of the fleet finally returned to Spain in 1522, with only 19 survivors.

Ferdinand Magellan

VASCO BALBOA

• Magellan may have named the Pacific Ocean, but he wasn’t the first European to see it. That honor belonged to Spanish conquistador and explorer Vasco Nunez de Balboa, who led a 1513 expedition in search of gold.

Vasco Balboa

He had already established a settlement on the Isthmus of Panama and led upwards of 200 Spaniards and natives across the strip of land. Balboa climbed a high mountain peak, revealing the Ocean in his view. The group named it the Mar del Sur, meaning South Sea. Seven years later Magellan renamed and sailed across this body of water.

VASCO DA GAMA

• Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama is credited as the first navigator to sail around Africa’s southern Cape of Good Hope, and as the first European to reach India by sea. In July 1497, da Gama departed Portugal, leading a fleet of four ships carrying 170 men. His quest was to discover a sea route from Europe to the East and establish a profitable trade relationship for precious spices.

• The fleet sailed down the western coast of Africa, through the treacherous waters off Good Hope, the southernmost tip of Africa. They reached the trading posts of India ten months later. After a successful venture, the ships, laden down with spices, set out for home, a journey that would last 11 terrible months. Out of a crew of 170 that had set sail 732 days earlier and traveled 24,000 miles, just 54 survivors remained. The majority of the men had perished from illness, primarily scurvy.

• A second journey to India in 1502 consisted of 20 ships, returning with a fortune in spices, gems, and pearls. In 1524, da Gama was asked to return to India to deal with the corruption of Portuguese officials. He returned to India, but died of malaria only three months later. □

This article is from: