Descobrimento das Filippinas pelo navegador portuguez Fernão de Magalhães

(11 User reviews)   1607
By Angela Green Posted on Jan 17, 2026
In Category - Sea Exploration
Alberto da Silva, Caetano, 1843-1924 Alberto da Silva, Caetano, 1843-1924
Portuguese
Hey, have you ever wondered what really happened on that first, world-changing voyage to the Philippines? We all know Magellan's name, but the actual story is wilder than any textbook summary. This book, written in the 1800s, is like finding a dusty, forgotten journal in an attic. It pulls you right into the 16th-century mindset. Think about it: a Portuguese captain sailing for Spain, leading a fleet into the complete unknown, driven by a mix of faith, ambition, and sheer stubbornness. The real conflict isn't just against storms and scurvy—it's a clash of empires, cultures, and personalities on the edge of the map. This isn't a dry history lesson; it's the messy, human drama behind the dot on the timeline. It makes you question everything you thought you knew about 'discovery.' If you like stories about impossible journeys and the complicated people who lead them, this hidden gem is for you.
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Let's be honest, most of us remember Ferdinand Magellan (or Fernão de Magalhães) from a school quiz: first to circumnavigate the globe, died in the Philippines. Alberto da Silva's book throws that simplistic version overboard. Written in the late 19th century, it uses the historical sources available then to reconstruct not just the route, but the palpable tension of the voyage.

The Story

The book follows Magellan's audacious 1519 expedition from its shaky start in Spain. We see him wrestling with mutinous Spanish captains who never trusted their Portuguese commander. The narrative sails with the crew through the terrifying vastness of the Pacific, a journey so long it shattered their expectations. The core of the story builds toward the arrival in the archipelago we now call the Philippines. Da Silva details the initial, often fragile, contacts with island leaders, the alliances formed, and the fatal misunderstandings that arose. It builds, step by step, to the chaotic battle on Mactan Island where Magellan's journey, and his life, abruptly end, leaving his remaining crew to complete the unthinkable trip home without him.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was how human it all feels. This isn't a statue on a pedestal; it's a portrait of a brilliantly stubborn and flawed man. You get a real sense of the immense gamble, the constant fear of the unknown, and the cultural collisions that were anything but simple. Da Silva, writing in his own historical period, gives us a fascinating double lens: we see the 16th century through a 19th-century perspective. It makes you think deeply about how we tell these foundational stories. The book challenges the shiny idea of 'discovery' and shows it for what it often was: a brutal, confusing, and world-altering meeting.

Final Verdict

Perfect for history buffs who are tired of the same old summaries, and for anyone who loves a true-life adventure story with profound consequences. If you enjoyed books like Over the Edge of the World but want to go back to an earlier, foundational account of the voyage, this is a fascinating read. Be prepared for the older writing style—it's not a modern thriller—but if you let yourself sink into it, you'll feel the ocean spray and the weight of history. It's a compelling reminder that the past is never just a list of dates and names.

Nancy Thomas
1 year ago

Helped me clear up some confusion on the topic.

Ashley Taylor
4 months ago

Used this for my thesis, incredibly useful.

Elijah Clark
4 months ago

Thanks for the recommendation.

William Rodriguez
9 months ago

Essential reading for students of this field.

Emma Martin
1 year ago

The layout is very easy on the eyes.

5
5 out of 5 (11 User reviews )

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