(Redirected from Giovanni Caboto)
'Giovanni Caboto' (
c. 1450 – c.
1498), known in
English as 'John Cabot', was an
Italian navigator and
explorer commonly credited as one of the first
early modern Europeans to land on the
North American mainland, aboard the ''
Matthew'' in
1497.
Biography
Giovanni Caboto (John Cabot) was born around 1450 in
Genoa, according to old papers about his family. Other sources states he came from
Gaeta.
His name is also associated with
Venice, where he spent some time as a boy. By 1461 Caboto was living in Venice, where he became a citizen. In about 1482 he married a Venetian woman, Ingleburt, and they had three sons: Ludovico,
Sebastiano and Sancio.
A voyager like his father, Cabot traded in spices with the ports of the eastern Mediterranean, and became an expert mariner. Valuable goods from
Asia - spices, silks, precious stones and metals - were brought either overland or up the
Red Sea for sale in Europe. Venetians played a prominent part in this trade.
Then, about 1490, Cabot and his family moved to Spain to seek support for a voyage to Asia. It is probable that, like his fellow countryman
Christopher Columbus, Cabot wanted to be part of an expanding frontier of exploration, the Atlantic Ocean. The leaders in this enterprise were the Portuguese, and the Spanish were also interested. The monarchs of both countries wanted to find new routes to Asia and its riches - routes which would avoid the Mediterranean and the virtual monopoly on the spice trade held by the Italians. There was another motivation as well. In a deeply religious age, with the final triumph of the Reconquista at Granada as a rallying point, Europeans wanted to spread knowledge of Christianity, and to contain the spread of Islam.
However, neither
Portugal or Spain was interested in John Cabot. The Portuguese pioneered their route to Asia by sailing down the African coast and around the Cape of Good Hope. And once Columbus had returned in triumph from his first transatlantic voyage in 1493 - he reached the Caribbean, but thought it was part of Asia - the Spanish likewise thought they had found their route to the east.
As a result, Cabot turned in 1494 or 1495 to
England - to the merchants of the port of
Bristol, where he settled with his family, and to the king,
Henry VII. His scheme was to reach Asia by sailing west across the north Atlantic. He estimated that this would be shorter and quicker than Columbus' southerly route.
In England, Cabot received the backing he had been refused in Spain and Portugal. First, the merchants of Bristol agreed to support his scheme. They had sponsored probes into the north Atlantic from the early
1480s, looking for possible trading opportunities. Some historians think that Bristol mariners might even have reached
Newfoundland and
Labrador even before Cabot arrived on the scene.
Sir Francis Bacon, in his (c. 1591) book ''The History of the Reign of King Henry VI'' mentions that ''...it is likely that the discovery first began where the lands did nearest meet. And there had been before that time a discovery of some lands, which they took to be islands, and were indeed the continent of America, towards the north-west. And it may be, that some relation of this nature coming afterwards to the knowledge of Columbus, and by him suppressed (desirous rather to make his enterprise the child of his science and fortune than the follower of a former discovery), did give him better assurance that all was not sea from the west of Europe and Africke.''
Exploration
After an aborted effort in 1496, Cabot eventually set sail on the ''Matthew'' in May 1497. The trip was uneventful, and he finally spotted land a month later, landing somewhere on the east coast of what is now Canada on
June 24, possibly Labrador, Newfoundland or Cape Breton Island (Canada and Great Britain accept Cape Bonavista as the official landing site). Seeing signs of habitation, he explored south down the coastline. He mapped the North American coastline from Nova Scotia to Newfoundland.
[1]
Cabot believed he had reached the northeast coast of Asia, and returned on
August 6,
1497. Amidst a positive reception, he planned to return and then continue on to Japan, and received new letters patent on
February 3,
1498.
Richard Ameryk was the chief investor in Cabot's second transatlantic voyage.
[1] Five ships set sail for Newfoundland the same year, but en route one ship was forced to return after being damaged in a storm. The rest were never heard from again, although some evidence suggests Cabot may have made it to America a second time. Cabot's voyages laid the groundwork for the later British claim to Canada.
[1]
See also
★
Age of Discovery
★
Cabot rock monument
★
Cabot Tower (Newfoundland)
★
Cabot Trail Cape Breton, Nova Scotia
Gallery
References
1. Lloyd, J & Mitchinson, J: "The Book of General Ignorance". Faber & Faber, 2006.
2. Lloyd, J & Mitchinson, J: "The Book of General Ignorance". Faber & Faber, 2006.
3. Lloyd, J & Mitchinson, J: "The Book of General Ignorance". Faber & Faber, 2006.
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
★ This article incorporates material from http://www.win.tue.nl/~engels/discovery/cabot.html . Copied with permission.
★
''Catholic Encyclopedia'' "John & Sebastian Cabot"
★
Encyclopaedia Britannica John Cabot
★
Preface and first few chapters Gibbons, Henry K. 1997. ''The Myth and Mystery of John Cabot: The Discoverer of North America''. Marten Cat Publishers, Port Aux Basques, Newfoundland.
★
Derek Croxton, ''
The Cabot Dilemma: John Cabot's 1497 Voyage & the Limits of Historiography'', 1990-1991
★
The John Day Letter 1497-1498
★
Home page of the ''Matthew'' replica with information about Cabot and the voyage.
★
John Cabot memorial Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia
★
Script about Vespucci's and Caboto's voyages
★
John Cabot and the Matthew, , Ian, Wilson, Redcliffe Press, 1996,
★ Cabot's story was featured on
''A Moment In Time'' in 2007
Further reading