« Portuguese Islands | Main | Elmina Castle »

Attack upon the Canary Islands

The Spaniards prefer to believe that after Jehan de Béthencourt’s attack upon the Canaries (A.D. 1403), his soldier Lancelot, who named Lanzarote Island, touched at Porto Santo in 1417; and presently, sailing to the south-west, discovered Madeira. This appears reasonable enough.

Patriotic Barbot (1700), in company with the mariner Villault de Belfons, Père Labat, and Ernest de Fréville, [Footnote: Mémoire sur le Commerce Maritime de Rouen.] claims the honour for France. According to that ’chief factor for the African Company,’ the merchants of Dieppe first traded to West Africa for cardamoms and ivory. This was during the reign of Charles V., and between 1364 and 1430, or half a century before the Portuguese. Their chief stations were Goree of Cape Verde, Sierra Leone, Cape Mount, the Kru or Liberian coast, then called ’of Grain,’ from the ’Guinea grains’ or Malaguetta pepper (Amomum granum Paradisi), and, lastly, the Gold Coast. Here they founded ’Petit Paris’ upon the Baie de France, at ’Serrelionne;’ ’Petit Dieppe,’ at the mouth of the St. John’s River, near Grand Bassá, south of Monrovia; and ’Cestro’ [Footnote: Now generally called Grand Sestros, and popularly derived from the Portuguese cestos–pepper.] or ’Sestro Paris,’ where, three centuries afterwards, the natives retained a few words of French. Hence Admiral Bouet-Willaumez explains the Great and Little ’Boutoo’ of our charts by butteau, from butte, the old Norman word still preserved in the great western prairies.

Post a comment

About

This page contains a single excerpt from the book "To the Gold Coast for Gold".

The previous excerpt in this book was Portuguese Islands.

The next excerpt in this book is Elmina Castle.

To start reading this book from the beginning go to the main page for To the Gold Coast for Gold or find more in the archives.

Powered by
Movable Type 3.31