Who was the first European explorer to reach Asia?

Ferdinand Magellan (1480–1521) was a Portuguese explorer who is credited with masterminding the first expedition to circumnavigate the world.

Magellan was sponsored by Spain to travel west across the Atlantic in search of the East Indies. In doing so, his expedition became the first from Europe to cross the Pacific Ocean and circumnavigate the world.

Who was Magellan?

Magellan was born in Portugal and was a successful explorer and navigator. He wanted to reach South-East Asia, where spices grew and gems were to be found, by sailing westwards across the Atlantic Ocean. He hoped to find a passage through South America so that he could sail all the way from the Atlantic to the ocean beyond the Americas (now known as the Pacific). He left Spain in 1519 with five ships and about 260 men.

Did he find a passage through South America?

Magellan found the strait that is now named after him, but only by chance. When two of his ships were driven towards land in a storm, the men feared they would be wrecked on the shore. Then, just in time, they spotted a small opening in the coastline. It was the passage for which they had been searching since they left home.

Where did the name ‘Pacific’ come from?

Magellan named the ocean the Pacific (meaning 'peaceful') because it was calm and pleasant when he entered it. 

By now one of his ships had deserted, but the other four started the journey across their new-found sea. To everyone's amazement, the crossing was to take three months and 20 days. Magellan and his men suffered terrible hunger on the voyage. They ran out of fresh food and many died of scurvy.

Did Magellan get home safely?

No: he was killed in a fight with islanders in the Philippines. He died on 27 April 1521 on Mactan Island, Cebu, Philippines.

So although he had masterminded the first expedition to sail around the world, he didn’t complete the voyage. In fact, the first person to sail around the world was a Malaysian, who had come back to Europe with Magellan many years before and then went as an interpreter on his later voyage. The first European to complete the circumnavigation was Magellan's second-in-command, Juan Sebastian de Elcano, who took over after his death.

How many men returned to Spain?

Of all the men who sailed with Magellan, only 18 returned to Spain in 1522. People were amazed when they saw those on board the one remaining ship, Victoria, for they looked starved and filthy.

Did people make use of the trade route Magellan had discovered?

The western sea route to the Spice Islands was not used for many years. Spain was too busy taking land in South America, and it was easier for the Portuguese to get to the East by sailing around the Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of Africa.

Asia very much represented the first frontier of European exploration due to both its geographical proximity and the fact that it was the only other similarly developed continent in the world. Iconic explorer Marco Polo and his famous travelogue inspired generations of merchants, explorers and statesmen to explore the lucrative opportunities in Asia, the natural resources of which such as spices proving to be immensely popular in Western European countries.

Marco Polo

Perhaps the most iconic and certainly the most influential of the great European explorers, Marco Polo played a highly significant role in encouraging the Age of Discovery. Perhaps most importantly, he played a major role in opening up trade between Europe and Asia. Hailing from a Venetian mercantile family, Marco Polo took after his father Nicole and uncle Maffeo, who had strong trading relations with the Middle East. As a result, the family was immensely wealthy. His father and uncle travelled through Central Asia and came into contact with Kublai Khan, the leader of Mongol-ruled China. They embarked on a second journey with Marco in tow, which lasted nearly 25 years. Marco endeared himself to Kublai Kahi and lived within his domain for nearly 20 years, carrying out a number of diplomatic missions on his behalf throughout China, India and Persia. Eventually, he returned home to Venice with his relatives through Iran, Constantinople and finally home. By the time of Polo’s return, Venice was ensnared in a war with Genoa. Marco Polo was quickly captured by the Genoese. His stories of exotic kingdoms entranced his fellow inmates, and a writer eventually started composing them into text. The resulting book – ‘The Travels of Marco Polo’, whilst embellished significantly, was a massive success and in the centuries to come inspired new generations of explorers, such as Christopher Columbus, many entranced by the exotic and lucrative Asian lands. This in turn was a major factor in the inadvertent discovery of the New World.

Vasco De Gama

A Portuguese explorer, De Gama has the distinction of being the first European to arrive in India through the sea. His discovery of this aquatic route from Europe to Asia was a considerable development in the onset of European imperialism and colonialism of the Asian continent. His successful voyage was the culmination of years of unsuccessful European attempts to access Asia by the sea. He significantly bolstered the Portuguese Empire’s economy due to the monopoly on access to Indian spice routes. His expeditions were eventful and sometimes fraught with conflict. He notably clashed with Muslim traders in the Arabian Peninsula. Despite this, he established a positive relationship with the Hindu population of Calicut, his first point of arrival He played a major role in diplomacy between Portugal and India, eventually returning later in life to curb festering Portuguese corruption in India. He died there of a short illness.

Ibn Battuta

One of the most under appreciated yet accomplished explorers of all time, Ibn Battuta was a Moroccan icon who travelled throughout the Islamic world and well into East Asia. Active during the 14th Century, Ibn Battuta spent the majority of his life encountering new lands and civilisations. His first pilgrimage, he travelled throughout Persia, Arabia and Somalia, stopping off at major pilgrimage points such as Mecca. His second tourney saw him go even further afield through Central Asia where he encountered the Golden Horde. He then travelled extensively throughout India and Southeast Asia before arriving in China, where he spent a great deal of time. His account of his life ‘The Travels’ is one of the most iconic travelogues of all time, an insightful text into the Medieval world.

William of Rubruck

Another explorer often drawn into comparison with Marco Polo, William of Rubrucck was a Flemish missionary during the 13th Century who travelled throughout the Middle East. During his adventures, he came into contact with the Khanate and travelled throughout the Mongol Empire. William of Rubruck is known for the detailed and insightful account he composed following the conclusion of his travels. Unlike the heavily embellished and much more popular account of Marco Polo, it is very grounded in realism and often poses a number of questions he himself was incapable of answering.

Afonso de Albuquerque

One of Portugal’s most iconic and successful explorers and statesmen. Afonso du Albuquerque led a number of military incursions in the Middle East and Asia. He laid the groundwork for Portugal’s lucrative Empire in the Middle East and Asia. He was known for his brilliant aptitude as a military commander and challenged dominant powers such as the Ottoman Empire as Portugal became a significant world power. His major accomplishments included the conquest of Goa in 1510 and the capture of Malacca in 1511. Like many figures in colonialism, he has divided opinion with modern observers both condemning and lionising his actions.

Niccolo de Conti

A successful Italian merchant best known for his travels to Southeast Asia and India. Fluent in Arabic due to years being based in Damascus, De Conti utilised this skill as well as his interest in Arab cultures to forge strong relationships with Muslim traders, allowing him widespread access throughout the Middle East. He was the first major Italian trader to establish links with Asia. He travelled throughout Persia, becoming fluent in Farsi before eventually arriving in India. De Conti’s account of his travels is considered to be amongst the finest of its kind, playing an important role in encouraging further European exploration as well as innovations in cartography.

In the 100 years from the mid-15th to the mid-16th century, a combination of circumstances stimulated men to seek new routes, and it was new routes rather than new lands that filled the minds of kings and commoners, scholars and seamen. First, toward the end of the 14th century, the vast empire of the Mongols was breaking up; thus, Western merchants could no longer be assured of safe-conduct along the land routes. Second, the Ottoman Turks and the Venetians controlled commercial access to the Mediterranean and the ancient sea routes from the East. Third, new nations on the Atlantic shores of Europe were now ready to seek overseas trade and adventure.

European exploration

World map by J.M. Contarini, 1506, depicting the expanding horizons becoming known to European geographers in the Age of Discovery.

Courtesy of the trustees of the British Museum; photograph, J.R. Freeman & Co. Ltd.

Henry the Navigator, prince of Portugal, initiated the first great enterprise of the Age of Discovery—the search for a sea route east by south to Cathay. His motives were mixed. He was curious about the world; he was interested in new navigational aids and better ship design and was eager to test them; he was also a Crusader and hoped that, by sailing south and then east along the coast of Africa, Arab power in North Africa could be attacked from the rear. The promotion of profitable trade was yet another motive; he aimed to divert the Guinea trade in gold and ivory away from its routes across the Sahara to the Moors of Barbary (North Africa) and instead channel it via the sea route to Portugal.

Who was the first European explorer to reach Asia?

history of Europe: Discovery of the New World

In the Iberian Peninsula the impetus of the counteroffensive against the Moors carried the Portuguese to probe the West African coastline...

Expedition after expedition was sent forth throughout the 15th century to explore the coast of Africa. In 1445 the Portuguese navigator Dinís Dias reached the mouth of the Sénégal, which “men say comes from the Nile, being one of the most glorious rivers of Earth, flowing from the Garden of Eden and the earthly paradise.” Once the desert coast had been passed, the sailors pushed on: in 1455 and 1456 Alvise Ca’ da Mosto made voyages to Gambia and the Cape Verde Islands. Prince Henry died in 1460 after a career that had brought the colonization of the Madeira Islands and the Azores and the traversal of the African coast to Sierra Leone. Henry’s captain, Diogo Cão, discovered the Congo River in 1482. All seemed promising; trade was good with the riverine peoples, and the coast was trending hopefully eastward. Then the disappointing fact was realized: the head of a great gulf had been reached, and, beyond, the coast seemed to stretch endlessly southward. Yet, when Columbus sought backing for his plan to sail westward across the Atlantic to the Indies, he was refused—“seeing that King John II [of Portugal] ordered the coast of Africa to be explored with the intention of going by that route to India.”

King John II sought to establish two routes: the first, a land and sea route through Egypt and Ethiopia to the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean and, the second, a sea route around the southern shores of Africa, the latter an act of faith, since Ptolemy’s map showed a landlocked Indian Ocean. In 1487, a Portuguese emissary, Pêro da Covilhã, successfully followed the first route; but, on returning to Cairo, he reported that, in order to travel to India, the Portuguese “could navigate by their coasts and the seas of Guinea.” In the same year, another Portuguese navigator, Bartolomeu Dias, found encouraging evidence that this was so. In 1487 he rounded the Cape of Storms in such bad weather that he did not see it, but he satisfied himself that the coast was now trending northeastward; before turning back, he reached the Great Fish River, in what is now South Africa. On the return voyage, he sighted the Cape and set up a pillar upon it to mark its discovery.

John II of PortugalHulton Archive/Getty Images

The seaway was now open, but eight years were to elapse before it was exploited. In 1492 Columbus had apparently reached the East by a much easier route. By the end of the decade, however, doubts of the validity of Columbus’s claim were current. Interest was therefore renewed in establishing the sea route south by east to the known riches of India. In 1497 a Portuguese captain, Vasco da Gama, sailed in command of a fleet under instructions to reach Calicut (Kozhikode), on India’s west coast. This he did after a magnificent voyage around the Cape of Storms (which he renamed the Cape of Good Hope) and along the unknown coast of East Africa. Yet another Portuguese fleet set out in 1500, this one being under the command of Pedro Álvarez Cabral; on the advice of da Gama, Cabral steered southwestward to avoid the calms of the Guinea coast; thus, en route for Calicut, Brazil was discovered. Soon trading depots, known as factories, were built along the African coast, at the strategic entrances to the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf, and along the shores of the Indian peninsula. In 1511 the Portuguese established a base at Malacca (now Melaka, Malaysia), commanding the straits into the China Sea; in 1511 and 1512, the Moluccas, or Spice Islands, and Java were reached; in 1557 the trading port of Macau was founded at the mouth of the Canton River. Europe had arrived in the East. It was in the end the Portuguese, not the Turks, who destroyed the commercial supremacy of the Italian cities, which had been based on a monopoly of Europe’s trade with the East by land. But Portugal was soon overextended; it was therefore the Dutch, the English, and the French who in the long run reaped the harvest of Portuguese enterprise.

Some idea of the knowledge that these trading explorers brought to the common store may be gained by a study of contemporary maps. The map of the German Henricus Martellus, published in 1492, shows the shores of North Africa and of the Gulf of Guinea more or less correctly and was probably taken from numerous seamen’s charts. The delineation of the west coast of southern Africa from the Guinea Gulf to the Cape suggests a knowledge of the charts of the expedition of Bartolomeu Dias. The coastlines of the Indian Ocean are largely Ptolemaic with two exceptions: first, the Indian Ocean is no longer landlocked; and second, the Malay Peninsula is shown twice—once according to Ptolemy and once again, presumably, according to Marco Polo. The Contarini map of 1506 shows further advances; the shape of Africa is generally accurate, and there is new knowledge of the Indian Ocean, although it is curiously treated. Peninsular India (on which Cananor and Calicut are named) is shown; although too small, it is, however, recognizable. There is even an indication to the east of it of the Bay of Bengal, with a great river running into it. Eastward of this is Ptolemy’s India, with the huge island of Taprobane—a muddled representation of the Indian peninsula and Ceylon (now Sri Lanka). East again, as on the map of Henricus Martellus, the Malay Peninsula appears twice. Ptolemy’s bonds were hard to break.