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History of Cape Cross


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The Portuguese navigator and explorer Diogo C�o was in 1484 ordered by King Jo�o II, as part of the search for a sea route to India and the Spice Islands, to advance south into undiscovered regions along the west coast of Africa. While doing so, he was to choose some particularly salient points and claim them for Portugal by setting up stone crosses called padr�os there.

During his first voyage, thought to have taken place in 1482, he reached a place he called Monte Negro, now called Cabo de Santa Maria, roughly 150 km southwest of today�s Benguela, Angola.

During his second voyage, in 1484�1486, C�o reached Cape Cross in January 1486, being the first European to visit this area. During this voyage he proceeded ca. 1,400 km farther than during the first one. He is known to have erected two padr�os in the areas beyond his first voyage, one in Monte Negro, and the second at Cape Cross. The current name of the place is derived from this padr�o. What can today be found at Cape Cross are two replicas of that first cross.

C�o�s first expedition took place only six years, and the second expedition�s end only two years before Bartholomeu Dias successfully rounded the Cape of Good Hope as the first European explorer in 1488.The original Cape Cross padr�o was removed in 1893 by Corvette captain Gottlieb Becker, commander of the SMS Falke of the German Navy, and taken to Berlin. A simple wooden cross was put in its place. The wooden cross was replaced two years later by a stone replica.

At the end of the 20th Century, thanks to private donations, another cross, more similar to the original one, was erected at Cape Cross, and thus there are now two crosses there.

The inscription on the padr�o reads, in English translation:

�    In the year 6685 after the creation of the world and 1485 after the birth of Christ, the brilliant, far-sighted King John II of Portugal ordered Diogo C�o, knight of his court, to discover this
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