he treated his crew well.
Well, isn't that a happy little question! Bartolomeu Dias was a Portuguese explorer, so he would have spoken Portuguese. Just imagine him sailing the seas, spreading positivity and discovering new lands with his language as his guide.
SI BARTOLOMEU DIAS NOONG 1488FROM: JOHNREY HIRO E. COLADILLANATUKLASAN NI BATOLOMEU DIAS ANG CAPE OF GOOD HOPE SA DULONG TIMOG NG APRIKASI VASCO DE DAMA NOONG 1489NAKARATING SI VASCO DE DAMA SA CALICUT, INDIA MATAPOS UMIKOT SA CAPE OF GOOD HOPE, AT NAKABALIK SIYA SA EUROPA SA RUTA RING ITO. MAHALAGA ANG NAGING PAGLALAYAG NI VASCO DE DAMA DAHIL NATUKLASAN ANG DIRESTONG RUTANG-DAGAT MULA SA EUROPA HANGGANG ASYASI BARTOLOMEU DIAS AT SI VASCO DIAS AY ISANG PORTUGAL OR PORTUGESEHis actions was important because it opened up a route to India.
Only as long as it took them to bribe the gate keepers. The wall was built to keep the Chinese IN as much as to keep others out. It did the former fairly well.
They sacked Rome in 410 AD. The Romans didn't treat them very well and kept them from building and from food. They were upset...
Well, to me it sounds like, some people aspire to do great things to make history and achieve, and some people they can't really help it but something that makes history just happens to them, and some people just don't make history. hope my answer helps (it was kind of a guess ;)
very well educated, befitting his noble family
He was treated well and respected. that is what i heard from another web. if you want to learn more search bartolomeu dias and go to time toast and go to the word version there. :) smiles!
He had two wifes that probably didnt go well for him
Well, isn't that a happy little question! Bartolomeu Dias was a Portuguese explorer, so he would have spoken Portuguese. Just imagine him sailing the seas, spreading positivity and discovering new lands with his language as his guide.
Sao Cristovao (Saint Christopher) (la Nina was Christopher Columbus's)
There is no historical record of Bartolomeu Dias attending school as a boy. He was a Portuguese explorer known for being the first European to sail around the southern tip of Africa in 1488. His education is not well-documented, but it is likely that he received training in navigation and seamanship from experienced sailors or through practical experience at sea.
Most Muslims treat others well.
That information may be available in an archive in Portugal. It isn't available as information passed down through generations of a family. For the direct line from Bartolomeu Dias [c. 1450-May 29, 1500] went extinct with the navigator's great grandchildren, Dona Paula de Novais and Dona Violante de Castro, neither of whom married or had children. Neither can any indication of trouble be found in what's known of the navigator's life. For Portuguese historians describe Dias as the descendant of a seafaring line. And Pero Dias is identified as Bartolomeu's brother, and commander of the supply ship for Bartolomeu's expedition of 1487-1488 around the Cape of Good Hope, off the coast of modern South Africa. Diogo Dias aka Diogo Gomes [c. 1420-c.1485] is identified as another brother, who participated in the discovery of the Cape Verde Islands. But Diogo was about 30 years older than Bartolomeu. So he may have been the navigator's father, or a relative other than in the direct, nuclear family. So the information would indicate that Bartolomeu Dias got along well enough with his family to be able to follow the same line of work, and have them in close quarters, as in the case of Pero holding down the critical role of supply ship commander.
A measure of a good person is how well they treat others.
A measure of a good person is how well they treat others.
Even though he was very occupied with music, he treated others very well, and he was generally well-respected.
Yes. But the exact details of the marriage of Bartolomeu Dias [c. 1450-May 29, 1500] are lacking. For the particulars of the bride's name, as well as the date and location of the ceremony, are unknown. But Portuguese historians have indicated that Dias fathered two children, Simao and Antonio. Both sons used, as last names, Dias de Novais. The phrase 'de Novais' is Portuguese for 'from' or 'of' Novais. Novais is a parish of Vila Nova de Famalicao, which is a municipality in the northern Portuguese district of Braga. And so it may have been the ancestral home of the Dias family, and the birthplace of the famous navigator's only two known children. Simao Dias de Novais wasn't known to have married, or to have fathered any known children. Antonio Dias de Novais became a Knight of the Order of Christ, and married Joana Fernandes, whom Portuguese historians described as an unspecified relative. Joana's brother Brites Fernao Pires used the phrase 'de Novais' with his last name. And so it may not be too far off the mark to ask: Did the famous navigator likewise marry a relative? And was the ancestral home of Dias' bride likewise Novais? Antonio and Joana had two children. In 1575, their son Paulo Dias de Novais led the colonization of Portuguese West Africa, which became the modern Angola. Paulo fathered no known children. Antonio and Joana also had a daughter. Guiomar de Novais became the second wife of Dom Rodrigo de Castro. Neither of their children, Dona Paula de Novais and Dona Violante de Castro, was known to have married or to have had children. Guiomar was married, a second time, to Pedro Correia da Silva. The couple had no children. And so the direct line from Bartolomeu Dias ended with the navigator's two childless great granddaughters. Additional, more precise information may be forthcoming from an archive in Portugal. Or it may be found in the records of the Catholic Church. For the Dias family was Catholic, and Dias' son Antonio became a Knight of the Order of Christ. The events of the lives of Dias, his son Antonio, his grandson Paulo, and his granddaughter Guiomar were such that the researcher would expect to find some documentation somewhere of the rituals of birth, christening, marriage, and death in their lives.