The First Voyage Around The World
The First Voyage Around The World
The First Voyage Around The World
Author
Antonio Pigafetta
The First Voyage Around The World by Antonio Pigafetta was written on board one of the 5 ships that
was first to circumnavigate the world during an expedition that was lead by the Portuguese explorer,
Ferdinand Magellan and after his death during the voyage, by Juan Sebastián Elcano.
Navigator
Ferdinand Magellan
Treaty of Tordesillas
The original journal was said to be lost and it was not clear on what language it was written.
An account of the voyage survives in four manuscript versions: one in Italian, and three in French
Account of Pigafetta
The Ships
The Ships
The government of Spain provided 5 ships for the Magellan expedition.
Ferdinand Magellan led the five Spanish ships and 237 men in what was to become the first voyage
around the World.
The names of the ships were the Trinidad, the San Antonio, the Concepcion, the Santiago and the
Victoria.
The Santiago
Santiago
Crew: 32
Called as a "caravel"
San Antonio
Crew: 60
Concepcion
The Concepcion
Crew: 45
Burned
The Trinidad
Trinidad
Under the Command of Ferdinand Magellan
The Flagship
Crew: 55
Left shipwrecked
Victoria
Crew: 43
The Victoria
On September 8, 1522, the crew of the Victoria cast anchor in the waters off of Seville, Spain, having just
completed the first circumnavigation of the world.
On board was Antonio Pigafetta, a young Italian nobleman who had joined the expedition three years
before, and served as an assistant to Ferdinand Magellan en route to the Molucca Islands.
Magellan was dead. The rest of the fleet was gone: the Santiago shipwrecked, the San Antonio
overtaken, the Concepcion burned and the Trinidad abandoned. Of the 237 sailors who departed from
Seville, eighteen returned on the Victoria. Pigafetta had managed to survive, along with his journal—
notes that detailed the discovery of the western route to the Moluccas.
And along the way, new land, new peoples: on the far side of the Pacific, the fleet had stumbled across
the Marianas archipelago, and some three hundred leagues further west, the Philippines.
Introduction
Key Points
Enrique was from Sumatra (present day Indonesia) and was a slave of Ferdinand Magellan
The Voyage
Timeline
Magellan and his men entered the port of Cebu
Initially, Magellan and his men encountered some struggle when first entering the port of Cebu.
The “king” of Cebu wanted Magellan and his men to pay tribute to them but, Magellan refused and told
the translator that they are working for the King of Spain and threatens him with war.
It was attended by Magellan, Raia Colambu (Rajah Kolambu), Raia Siaui (Rajah Siagu), Spanish voyagers,
and the local islanders.
April 1, 1521
Arrival in Samar
April 8, 1521
Christianity
A mass was held with Raia Humabon and his people attending the ceremony.
She asked for the little child Jesus to keep in place of her idols and this image of child Jesus is now
known as the Sto. Niño found in Cebu.
Magellan and his men called it Acquada da li buoni Segnialli (“The Watering-place of Good Signs”)
There are many islands in that district, and therefore they called them the archipelago of San Lazaro, as
they were discovered on the Sunday of St. Lazarus
"When morning came, forty-nine of us leaped into the water up to our thighs, and walked through
water for more than two cross-bow flights before we could reach the shore. The boats cound not
approach nearer because of certain rocks in the water. The other eleven men remained behind to guard
the boats. when we reached land, those men had formed in three divisions to the number of more than
one thousand five hundred persons. When they saw us, they charged down upon us with exceeding loud
cries, two divisions on our flanks and the other on our front." - Antonio Pigafetta's Account
According to Datu Zula, the chief of Mactan, Lapu-Lapu refused too obey the king of Spain.
Lapu-Lapu did not want to pay Magellan and his men the goat that they were promised.
Magellan was not pleased since they went to Mactan to garner food for their expedition.
Magellan ordered three boats to be equipped with a matter of fifty or sixty men and went againsts the
place
Death Of Magellan
At midnight, sixty of Magellan’s men set out armed with corselets and helmet
They found three thousand or four thousand men who fought with such a good will and there happened
the death of Magellan
He proved to our explorers and to the people today that circumnavigating the world was possible
His circumnavigation proved that the world is round
He discovered a strait that connected Atlantic and Pacific Ocean and called it Strait of Magellan
This book aids the researchers and students of today in understanding the context of the Magellan
expedition and how the whole Europe-Philippines conflict commenced..
Growing up, we’ve understood this issue just simply as the start of the Spanish era and Magellan being
the Philippines’ villain without taking into debate the context and different reasons of the expedition.
• It proved that the earth is not flat, and one can go to the east by sailing west.
Significance of the Magellan Expedition • The main significance of his voyage was that he showed it was
possible to sail around the world, and left a record of how to do it. • Magellan’s voyage vastly increased
the geographical knowledge of mankind and proved once and for all that the earth is round. •
Considering the inadequacy of marine instruments at the time, Magellan´s voyage can be considered as
the greatest single trip ever undertaken. In terms of the hardships the men endured and the courage
they displayed, Magellan’s maritime exploit has perhaps never been surpassed. The route he took to
reach the Philippines was entirely new, and the Venetian monopoly of the trade route to the east was
thus broken. Spain became the supreme power in the building of a colonial empire
15. • His discovery of the Philippines brought the archipelago into the awareness of Europe. • Finally,
the voyage paved the way to Spanish colonization and Christianization of the Philippines. The later
voyages of Fernando de Villalobos and Miguel Lopez de Legaspi, to a certain extent, owed their success
to Magellan’s epochal voyage to the Far East. • From the point of view of the Filipinos, Magellan’s
expedition was significant because it paved the way for contacts between the Philippines and western
civilization
Contribution and relevance of the First Voyage around the world inunderstanding the grand
narrative of Philippine history:It is the only known document about Lapu-Lapu’s life.Due to the daily
notes Pigaletta took and details about the expedition that hewrote about, he is considered the best
source today of the customs and usagesof the Filipinos in the early 16th century.A primary source
account assisted us in understanding how early Filipinos lived.Several "Datus" are said to have joined
forces with the Europeans. As a result,we can conclude that societies of varying sophistication existed in
the Philippinesprior to Magellan's expedition.
It emphasizes the native’s generosity and hospitality to the expedition team. Afterall, there might not
have been a circumnavigation if the locals on HomonhonIsland had not offered food and water to the
Europeans, and the ships' rationshad not been replenished from local sources. The emphasis on
hospitality – asupposedly benign Filipino national character quality — adds another layer tonational
myth-making that could shape the next 500 years of Philippine history.It helped us understand how
Filipinos lived in the past and how they dealt withMagellan and his men when they arrived in the
Philippines.Contains the first vocabulary of Visayan words ever presented by a European
Starting point of the first expedition around the world.The book serves as evidence that the world is
round and not flat.This book assists today's researchers and students in comprehending
thecontext of the Magellan expedition and the origins of the entire European-Philippine
conflict commenced.Magellan discovered Pacific Ocean.Businesses rose because of the discoveries
that made up the different products.Collaborations were also made that benefited the different
sides.Opened many doors in the Philippines. We discover what religion Filipinos in the past used to
have.
We found out that our ancestors fought and delayed the Spanish occupation foryears. Profetta
presented the events in a chronological order that gives readers a vividimage of what it was like to be a
part of the first voyage around the world.
It is important to know these things (our origin) because we can understand our own identity,
we can learn to preserve our culture and can correct the mistakes that happened in the past