João Vaz Corte-Real (pron. IPA *) was a Portuguese explorer in the 15th century. In 1472 he was granted lands on Terceira Island on the Azores because he had discovered Terra Nova do Bacalhau (literally, New Land of the Codfish); there is considerable speculation that this unidentified isle may have been Newfoundland. If this is to be believed, Corte-Real would have come to America over twenty years before Columbus. The plausibility of such a voyage is not questioned, but the lack of evidence condemns it to remain conjecture.
Corte-Real was the father of Miguel and Gaspar Corte-Real, who accompanied him on his trip. Various fragmentary evidence suggests the expedition was a joint venture between the kings of Portugal and Denmark, and that Corte-Real was accompanied by the German sailors Didrik Pining and Hans Pothorst, and even the possibly-mythical Pole John of Kolno.
Corte-Real had done two explorations in the Northwest Atlantic; in the first voyage, by some historians, he reached Terra Verde (Green Land) (later known as Terra Nova, English: Newfoundland) before 1472.1 It is during the second trip with his sons that he found the Island of Bacalhau. For his discovery he was granted the title of Capitão-Donatário of Angra do Heroísmo in 1474, and in 1483, he took the same position in the Capitania of São Jorge Island.
Portuguese explorers | Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact
João Vaz Corte-Real | Joao Vaz Corte-Real | João Vaz Corte Real | João Vaz Corte Real
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