Jump to content

Pedro Da Covilha !!install!! (2024)

: Find the source of the spice trade in India and establish an alliance with "Prester John" in Ethiopia. The Disguise

To understand the journey of Pêro da Covilhã, one must first understand the obsession of King John II of Portugal. In the late 15th century, Portugal was a small kingdom on the edge of Europe, obsessed with breaking the Venetian and Ottoman monopolies on the spice trade. pedro da covilha

Covilhã’s work was epistemic : he transformed a myth into a map. : Find the source of the spice trade

Pêro da Covilhã (c. 1460–after 1526) was a legendary Portuguese explorer and diplomat whose overland travels laid the critical groundwork for Portugal's Maritime Age. Often described as a "merchant-spy," his mission was to scout the Indian Ocean trade routes and locate the mythical Christian kingdom of Prester John nearly a decade before Vasco da Gama ever set sail. The Mission of the Two Spies In 1487, King John II of Portugal dispatched Covilhã and Afonso de Paiva on a high-stakes secret mission: Covilhã’s work was epistemic : he transformed a

That man was Pêro da Covilhã (Pedro da Covilhã). He did not sail a flagship; he did not command an army. He was a spy, a diplomat, and a master of disguise who traversed the Islamic world during a time of holy war, becoming the first European in the modern era to gather intelligence on the fabled lands of India and Ethiopia.

Most importantly, he handed them a map of the Indian Ocean drawn from memory, showing the routes to India, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), and Malacca. This information was rushed back to Lisbon. When Vasco da Gama set sail in 1497, he carried a "secret map" – likely based on Covilhã’s intelligence. Da Gama knew exactly where to find Christian merchants in Calicut and how to navigate the monsoon winds.

He and Paiva posed as honey merchants to move unnoticed through Cairo.

×
×
  • Create New...