The king commissions da Gama to sail to India. His reputation as a fierce sailor and warrior increases. Da Gama travels first to Lisbon and then to the Algarve region of Portugal, where he seizes French ships. The French government disrupts Portuguese shipping, and King John II sends Vasco da Gama to retaliate.
Vasco da Gama builds his reputation as a sailor.
When da Gama joins the Order of Santiago, his family’s prospects improve, especially since the master of the Order later becomes King John II of Portugal. Vasco da Gama joins the Order of Santiago. He develops a reputation as a strong sailor. Little is known about Vasco da Gama’s early years, but he joins the navy, where he learns to navigate. He is the third son of Estêvão da Gama, who commanded the fortress at Sines. Vasco da Gama is born to a noble family in Sines, Portugal. Mr Foss spoke with pride of his Portuguese heritage, his mother a member of the first group of Portuguese to settle in WA.Vasco da Gama is born in Sines, Portugal.(c. The occasion also marks the 45th anniversary of the arrival of the first Portuguese settlers to WA and celebrates the contribution the Portuguese people have made to the prosperity of the State and Fremantle area. Mr Foss congratulated City of Fremantle staff and local artists Ed Nailor and Clair Bailey, who designed the memorial. It is four metres long and three-and-a-half metres high. The bronze medallion transported from Portugal was first hand-crafted in wood and features the face of Vasco da Gama. The memorial is designed in the shape of a wave with a map of Portugal in handmade WA ceramic tiles. As Australia's gateway to the Indian Ocean and as one of the most culturally diverse cities in our nation, it is particularly fitting that Fremantle should have such a memorial." "The memorial symbolises the links which bind WA to the Indian Ocean region. "The conference recognises Vasco da Gama as a great navigator who opened Europe to new peoples and lands, much as Christopher Columbus did when he crossed the Atlantic Ocean to America," Mr Foss said. The unveiling of the memorial on the Esplanade Reserve at Marine Terrace, Fremantle coincides with the international Vasco da Gama Quincentenary Conference which was held in Fremantle this week, bringing together more than 50 academics from around the world. Mr Foss said the epic voyage of Vasco da Gama opened the sea route between Western Europe and the Indian Ocean region, making it of special significance to Western Australia.
For a short time in 1524 he was the Governor of Portuguese India, under the title of Viceroy.Īrts Minister Peter Foss today unveiled a memorial to commemorate the 500th anniversary of the voyage of Portuguese navigator, Vasco da Gama. Vasco da Gama, was a Portuguese explorer, one of the most successful in the Age of Discovery and the commander of the first ships to sail directly from Europe to India. The monument commemorates the 500th anniversary of the voyage of explorer, Vasco da Gama (1469 - 1525), the Portuguese navigator whose voyages linked Europe with the Indian Ocean.