
.
.Amerigo
VESPUCCI
Amerigo Vespucci (March 9, 1454 – February 22, 1512) was
an Italian (from Republic of Florence) explorer, navigator and
cartographer. The continents of North America and South America
are generally believed to have derived their name from the
feminized Latin version of his first name.
Expeditions
Amerigo Vespucci was born and brought up by his uncle in the
Republic of Florence in what is now Italy.
He worked for Lorenzo de' Medici and his son, Giovanni. In 1492 he
was sent to work at the agency of Medici bank in Seville, Spain.
At the invitation of king Manuel I of Portugal, Vespucci
participated as observer in several voyages that explored the east
coast of South America between 1499 and 1502. In 1500 that King's
commander, Pedro Álvares Cabral, on his way to the Cape of Good
Hope and India, had discovered Brazil at latitude 16°52'S.
Portugal claimed this land by the Treaty of Tordesillas, and the King wished to know whether it
was merely an island or part of the continent Spanish explorers
had encountered farther north.
Vespucci, having already been to the Brazilian shoulder, seemed
the person best qualified to go as an observer with the new
expedition Manuel was sending. Vespucci did not command at the
start - the Portuguese captain was probably
Gonçalo Coelho - but ultimately took charge at the request of
the Portuguese officers. Vespucci, in all probability, voyaged to
America at the time noted, but he did not have command and as yet
had no practical experience piloting a ship. On the first of these
voyages he was aboard the ship that discovered that South America
extended much further south than previously thought.
The expeditions became widely known in Europe after two accounts
attributed to Vespucci were published between 1502 and 1504. In
1507, Martin Waldseemüller produced a world map on which he named
the new continent America after Vespucci's first name, Amerigo. In
an accompanying book, Waldseemüller published one of the Vespucci
accounts, which led to criticism that Vespucci was trying to upset
Christopher Columbus' glory. However, the rediscovery in the
18th century of other letters by Vespucci, primarily the Soderini
Letter, has led to the view that the early published accounts
could be fabrications, not by Vespucci, but by others.
In 1503 Vespucci sailed in
Portuguese service again to Brazil, but this expedition failed
to make new discoveries. The fleet broke up, the Portuguese
commander's ship disappeared, and Vespucci could proceed only a
little past Bahia before returning to Lisbon in 1504. He did not
sail again, and as there seemed no more work for him in Portugal
he returned to Seville, where he settled permanently and where he
had earlier married Maria de Cerezo. He was middle-aged, and the
fact that there were no children might indicate that Maria was
also past her youth.
Historical role
Columbus never thought Vespucci had tried to steal his laurels,
and in 1505 he wrote his son, Diego, saying of Vespucci, "It has
always been his wish to please me; he is a man of good will;
fortune has been unkind to him as to others; his labors have not
brought him the rewards he in justice should have."
In 1508, after only two voyages to the Americas, the position
of chief of navigation of Spain (piloto mayor de Indias)
was created for Vespucci, with the responsibility of planning
navigation for voyages to the Indies.
Two letters attributed to Vespucci were published during his
lifetime. Mundus Novus (New World) was a Latin translation
of a lost Italian letter sent from
Lisbon to Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de' Medici. It describes a
voyage to South America in 1501-1502. Mundus Novus was
published in late 1502 or early 1503 and soon reprinted and
distributed in numerous European countries.
Lettera di Amerigo Vespucci delle isole nuovamente trovate in
quattro suoi viaggi (Letter of Amerigo Vespucci concerning the
isles newly discovered on his four voyages), known as Lettera
al Soderini or just Lettera, was a letter in Italian
addressed to
Piero Soderini. Printed in 1504 or 1505, it claimed to be an
account of four voyages to the Americas made by Vespucci between
1497 and 1504. A Latin translation was published by the German
Martin Waldseemüller in 1507 in
Cosmographiae Introductio, a book on cosmography and
geography, as Quattuor Americi Vespuccij navigationes
(Four Voyages of Amerigo Vespucci).
In 1508,
King Ferdinand made Vespucci chief navigator of Spain at a
huge salary and commissioned him to found a school of navigation,
in order to standardize and modernize navigation techniques used
by Iberian sea captains then exploring the world. Vespucci even
developed a rudimentary, but fairly accurate method of determining
longitude (which only more accurate chronometers would later
improve upon).
In the 18th century three unpublished familiar letters from
Vespucci to Lorenzo de' Medici were rediscovered. One describes a
voyage made in 1499-1500 which corresponds with the second of the
"four voyages". Another was written from
Cape Verde in 1501 in the early part of the third of the four
voyages, before crossing the Atlantic. The third letter was sent
from Lisbon after the completion of that voyage.
Some have suggested that Vespucci, in the two letters published
in his lifetime, was exaggerating his role and constructed
deliberate fabrications. However, many scholars now believe that
the two letters were not written by him but were fabrications by
others based in part on genuine letters by Vespucci. It was the
publication and widespread circulation of the letters that might
have led
Martin Waldseemüller to name the new continent
America on his world map of 1507 in St-Dié (France). Vespucci used a
Latinised form of his name, Americus Vespucius, in his Latin
writings, which Waldseemüller used as a base for the new name,
taking the feminine form America, according to the
prevalent view (for other hypotheses, see the footnote in the
introduction). The book accompanying the map stated: "I do not see
what right any one would have to object to calling this part,
after Americus who discovered it and who is a man of intelligence,
Amerige, that is, the Land of Americus, or America: since both
Europa and Asia got their names from women". Amerigo itself
is an
Italian form of the medieval Latin Emericus, which through
the German form Heinrich (in English, Henry) derived from the
Germanic name
Haimirich.
The two disputed letters claim that Vespucci made four voyages
to America, while at most two can be verified from other sources.
At the moment there is a dispute between historians on when
Vespucci visited mainland the first time. Some historians like
German Arciniegas and Gabriel Camargo Perez think that his first
voyage was done in June 1497 with the Spanish Pilot Juan de la
Cosa. Vespucci's real historical importance may well rest more in
his letters, whether he wrote them all or not, than in his
discoveries. From these letters, the European public learned about
the newly discovered continent of the Americas for the first time;
its existence became generally known throughout Europe within a
few years of the letters' publication. He died on February 22,
1512 in Seville, Spain, of an unknown cause.
Voyages
First Voyage
A letter published in 1504 purports to be an account by
Vespucci, written to Soderini, of a lengthy visit to the New
World, leaving Spain in May 1497 and returning in October 1498.
However, modern scholars have doubted that this voyage took place,
and consider this letter a forgery.
Whoever did write the letter makes several observations of native
customs, including use of
hammocks and
sweat lodges.
Second Voyage
About the 1499–1500, Vespucci joined an expedition in the
service of Spain, with Alonso de Ojeda (or Hojeda) as the fleet
commander. The intention was to sail around the southern end of
the African mainland into the Indian Ocean. After hitting land at
the coast of what is now Guyana, the two seem to have separated.
Vespucci sailed southward, discovering the mouth of the Amazon
River and reaching 6°S, before turning around and
seeing
Trinidad and the
Orinoco River and returning to Spain by way of
Hispaniola. The letter, to Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de'
Medici, claims that Vespucci determined his longitude celestially on August 23, 1499,
while on this voyage. However, that claim may be fraudulent,
which could cast doubt on the letter's credibility.
Third voyage
The last certain voyage of Vespucci was led by Gonçalo Coelho
in 1501–1502 in the service of Portugal. Departing from Lisbon,
the fleet sailed first to Cape Verde where they met two of Pedro
Álvares Cabral's ships returning from India. In a letter from Cape
Verde, Vespucci says that he hopes to visit the same lands that
Álvares Cabral had explored, suggesting that the intention is to
sail west to Asia, as on the 1499-1500 voyage. On reaching the
coast of Brazil, they sailed south along the coast of South
America to Rio de Janeiro's bay. If his own account is to be
believed, he reached the latitude of Patagonia before turning
back, although this also seems doubtful, since his account does
not mention the broad estuary of the Río de la Plata, which he
must have seen if he had gotten that far south. Portuguese maps of
South America, created after the voyage of Coelho and Vespucci, do
not show any land south of present-day Cananéia at 25° S, so this may represent the southernmost
extent of their voyages.
After the first half of the expedition, Vespucci mapped Alpha
and Beta Centauri, as well as the constellation Crux, the Southern
Cross. Although these stars had been known to the ancient Greeks,
gradual precession had lowered them below the European horizon so
that they had been forgotten. On his return to Lisbon, Vespucci
wrote in a letter to d'Medici that the land masses they explored
were much larger than anticipated and different from the Asia
described by Ptolemy or Marco Polo and therefore, must be a New
World, that is, a previously unknown fourth continent, after
Europe, Asia, and Africa.
Fourth voyage
Little is known of his last voyage in 1503–1504 or even whether
it actually took place.
Vespucci died from malaria in Seville in 1512.
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