Why Black History is very important to America-stuff they rather you not know

Published:

Updated:

African Maritime Knowledge Shaped European Speculation About the Americas

 

1. The Portuguese weren’t guessing — they were listening

King John II’s belief in a western mainland didn’t come from myth or astrology.

It came from African sailors.

 

Reports circulated that:

         Canoes from the Guinea coast (West Africa)

         Loaded with trade goods

         Had been found far out in the Atlantic, drifting westward

 

To Europeans, this was shocking.

To West Africans, it wasn’t.

The peoples of the Upper Guinea Coast — Wolof, Mandé, Serer, and others — had long traditions of:

         Openocean fishing

         Longdistance canoe travel

         Navigating currents and winds

         Trading across vast stretches of water

So when Africans said, “There’s land out there,” Europeans took it seriously.

 

  Europeans knew Africans were the best navigators in that region

Portugal had spent nearly a century learning from West African pilots, interpreters, and sailors.

 

They relied on African maritime knowledge for:

         Currents

         Winds

         Coastal geography

         Seasonal patterns

         Deepwater navigation

 

So when African canoes were found far west of Cape Verde, it wasn’t dismissed as an accident — it was treated as data.

 

 The Mission

The third voyage of Columbus wasn’t just another islandhopping expedition.

 

According to Bartolomé de Las Casas’s abstract of Columbus’s journal, the Crown wanted Columbus to verify the existence of a mainland southwest of the Cape Verde Islands.

Why?

Because King John II of Portugal believed a continent existed there. His reasoning came from reports that:

 

          Canoes from the Guinea coast (West Africa) had been found drifting westward

         These canoes carried merchandise, suggesting longdistance westward travel was possible

         This implied land existed far to the west—land not yet claimed by Portugal or Spain

This is a fascinating detail because it shows that African maritime knowledge influenced European speculation about the Americas

 

Entry #206

Comments

This Blog entry currently has no comments.

Post a Comment

Please Log In

To use this feature you must be logged into your Lottery Post account.

Not a member yet?

If you don't yet have a Lottery Post account, it's simple and free to create one! Just tap the Register button and after a quick process you'll be part of our lottery community.

Register