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Vasco took command when his father died and sailed from Lisbon in July 1497. He arrived at Calicut the following year,i.e.1498, via Natal, Mozambique and Mombasa. Initially welcomed by the Zamorin (Hindu ruler) of Calicut, tension gradually mounted and da Gama left at the end of August. They arrived back in Lisbon in September, where he received titles, estates and an annual pension.

Following a massacre of Portuguese expatriates in Calicut by local Hindus, following Muslim incitement, a new fleet was sent to establish Portuguese control. Command was given to da Gama, who set sail in February 1502. On arriving at Calicut, he seized an Arab ship carrying merchandise and hundreds of passengers, including women and children. After taking the cargo, da Gama locked the passengers into the captured ship and set it alight, killing them all.

He then formed an alliance with the ruler of Cannanore, an enemy of the Zamorin, before sailing to Calicut, where he demanded that the Muslims be banished from the port. To underline his demands, he bombarded the port and killed 38 Hindu fishermen who had sailed out to trade with his ships. He then sailed to the port of Cochin and formed an alliance with the local ruler. A brief but victorious battle with Arab ships preceded the fleet's departure home, in February 1503.

On his return home, da Gama was eventually granted further privileges and revenues and continued to advise the King on Indian matters. In 1519, he was created count of Vidigueira and, in 1524, was nominated as Portuguese viceroy in India. Arriving in Goa, he fell ill and died in December 1524.

2006-10-21 17:49:24 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Vasco Da Gama In India

2016-09-29 12:17:23 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Vasco da Gama landed in Calicut in 1498.

2006-10-21 05:25:19 · answer #3 · answered by Ramesh 2 · 0 0

Vasco da Gama Landed in Kapad beach, in Kozhikode District of Kerala State. The Year In Which he landed was 1498

2006-10-21 05:14:23 · answer #4 · answered by django_of_djangos 1 · 0 0

Vasco da Gama landed in India on 20 May 1498. He landed there in Calicut, which, from the fourteenth century, had been the principal market for trade in spices, precious stones, and pearls. It's in the southern state of Kerala in India. It is the headquarters of Kozhikode district, and was formerly the capital of an independent kingdom, and later of the erstwhile Malabar District. At first, da Gama and his trading were well-received, but this did not last for long. Da Gama left India on August 29, 1498, after he was told to pay a large tax and leave all of his trading goods. When he left, da Gama took his goods with him, together with some Indian hostages.

2006-10-21 04:47:21 · answer #5 · answered by ivan_k_s 1 · 1 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
Where did Vasco da Gama land in India? When did he land here?

2015-08-13 07:02:31 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Vasco da Gama landed in India at Calicut, now in the State of Kerala. He landed there in 1498.

2006-10-21 04:14:37 · answer #7 · answered by SRIRANGAM G 4 · 0 0

Vasco da Gama, c.1469–1524, a Portuguese navigator, was the first European to travel by sea to India (1497–99). At the order of King Manuel I of Portugal, he commanded four vessels to Calicut, where he opened up the lucrative spice trade, thus beginning the Portuguese empire, one of the great European empires, which lasted 500 years.
He returned to India with 20 ships in 1502 and established Portuguese power in India and Africa.

His methods were harsh, and he was not a good administrator. He was sent back to India as viceroy in 1524 but soon died.

2006-10-21 03:44:18 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Vasco took command when his father died and sailed from Lisbon in July 1497. He arrived at Kappad, Calicut for the first time and in the year,i.e.1498, via Natal, Mozambique and Mombasa. Initially welcomed by the Zamorin (Hindu ruler) of Calicut, tension gradually mounted and da Gama left at the end of August. They arrived back in Lisbon in September, where he received titles, estates and an annual pension.

2016-03-19 04:38:35 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Naval commander Vasco de Gama's 1497 expedition from Lisbon opened a route to India and led to Portugese dominance of the Eastern spice trade. Little is known of his life before he was assigned command of the expedition that left Lisbon in July of 1497.

He established a route around Africa's Cape of Good Hope, up the coast of East Africa and finally to Calicut in India. He returned to Portugal in 1499, having lost most of his men while establishing trade posts in East Africa and India.

On his second voyage to India in 1502, the new "Admiral of the Indian Ocean" led 20 ships against rival Arab traders and secured military supremacy in Calicut and Goa; the treasures he brought home to Portugal earned him royal favor and even greater repute. Created a count in 1519, he was named Viceroy of India in 1524 and travelled to Goa.

While in India he fell ill (probably malaria) and died.

2006-10-21 21:47:36 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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