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Portugal Geocoin DP - Infante D. Henrique

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Owner:
Lord of the Rocks Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Thursday, June 22, 2006
Origin:
Portugal
Recently Spotted:
In the hands of beckynralph.

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DP - Infante D. Henrique" or "Prince Henri, the navigator" is a Silver edition, 2006, Portuguese geocoin whose aim is to discover new places.

About This Item

infante.jpg

Before describing in the course of the discoveries which were soon to render Portugal the foremost colonizing power in Europe it is necessary to indicate the main causes which contributed to that result. As the south-westernmost people of Europe, the Portuguese were the natural leaders of that work of exploration which had been carried on during the middle ages. The long shoreline of their country, with its fine harbors and rivers flowing westward to the ocean, had been the training-ground of a race of adventurous seamen. It was impossible, moreover, to expand or reach new markets except by sea: the interposition of Castile and Aragon, so often hostile, completely prevented direct land routes to other European countries. Consequently the Portuguese merchants sent their goods by sea to England, Flanders, or the Hanse towns. The whole history of the nation had also inspired a desire for fresh conquests among its leaders. Portugal had won and now held its independence by the sword. The long struggle to expel the Moors, with the influence of foreign Crusaders and the military orders, had given a religious sanction to the desire for martial fame. Nowhere was the ancient crusading spirit so active a political force. To make war upon Islam seemed to the Portuguese their natural destiny and their duty as Christians.

The Portuguese economy had benefited from its connections with advanced Muslim states. A money economy was well enough established for 15th-century workers in the countryside as well as in the towns to be paid in coin. The agriculture of the countryside had diversified to the point where grain was imported from Morocco (a symptom of an economy dependent upon Portugal's), while specialised crops occupied former grain-growing areas: vinyards, olives, or the sugar factories of the Algarve, later to be reproduced in Brazil (Braudel 1985). Most of all, the Aviz dynasty that had come to power in 1385 marked the semi-eclipse of the conservative land-oriented aristocracy (See The Consolidation of the Monarchy in Portugal.)

It was the genius of Prince Henry the Navigator that coordinated and utilized all these tendencies towards expansion. Prince Henry placed at the disposal of his captains the vast resources of the Order of Christ, of which he was the head, and the best information and most accurate instruments and maps that could be obtained. He sought to effect a junction with the half-fabulous Christian Empire of "Prester John" by way of the "Western Nile" (the Senegal), and, in alliance with that potentate, to crush the Turks and liberate Palestine. The conception of an ocean route to India appears to have originated after his death. On land he again defeated the Moors, who attempted to re-take Ceuta in 1418; but in an expedition to Tangier, undertaken in 1436 by King Edward (1433-1438), the Portuguese army was defeated, and could only escape destruction by surrendering as a hostage Prince Ferdinand, the king's youngest brother. Ferdinand, known as "the Constant", from the fortitude with which he endured captivity, died unransomed in 1443. By sea Prince Henry's captains continued their exploration of Africa and the Atlantic Ocean. In 1433 Cape Bojador was doubled; in 1434 the first consignment of slaves was brought to Lisbon; and slave trading soon became one of the most profitable branches of Portuguese commerce. The Senegal was reached in 1445, Cape Verde was passed in the same year, and in 1446 Alvaro Fernandes pushed on almost as far as Sierra Leone. This was probably the farthest point reached before the Navigator died (1460).

Gallery Images related to DP - Infante D. Henrique

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Tracking History (12297.6mi) View Map

Retrieve It from a Cache 4/4/2008 hfap retrieved it from Casa de Camilo [S. Miguel Seide - V.N. Famalicão] Braga, Portugal   Visit Log

Tão bonita que não resisti em tirar para admirar melhor😁
Vai connosco fazer uns kms

Dropped Off 4/3/2008 coisos placed it in Casa de Camilo [S. Miguel Seide - V.N. Famalicão] Braga, Portugal - 14.37 miles  Visit Log
Discovered It 3/7/2008 teamtimi discovered it   Visit Log

bem bonita

Discovered It 3/7/2008 Coruja discovered it   Visit Log

Das mais bonitas que vi até hoje...

Retrieve It from a Cache 3/7/2008 coisos retrieved it from 2 EM 1 - VILA DO CONDE (AO FUNDO) Porto, Portugal   Visit Log

Rumo a uma nova cache !

Dropped Off 3/5/2008 Hot_Marmota placed it in 2 EM 1 - VILA DO CONDE (AO FUNDO) Porto, Portugal - 7.74 miles  Visit Log

Na Pascoa vou até Cabo Verde, mas como não há caches lá (ilha do Sal), ficas perto de onde eram construídas as Naus.

[This entry was edited by hot_marmota on Thursday, March 06, 2008 at 2:53:03 AM.]

Retrieve It from a Cache 2/18/2008 Hot_Marmota retrieved it from PORTAS DE S.PEDRO Porto, Portugal   Visit Log

Depois deste parque, vamos ver se te levo para longe.

Dropped Off 2/17/2008 pxlobo placed it in PORTAS DE S.PEDRO Porto, Portugal - 156.76 miles  Visit Log

Aqui, que bem ficas !!!

Retrieve It from a Cache 1/27/2008 pxlobo retrieved it from Monte de São Silvestre [Viana do Castelo] Viana do Castelo, Portugal   Visit Log

Bom, vamos continuar viagem ...

Discovered It 1/2/2008 Fernando Rei discovered it   Visit Log

Muito bonita!

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