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CHAPTER XVIII - How the Portuguese went to the port of Cananor, and saw the King, and of what happened with him, and what they settled

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2011

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Summary

While the Portuguese were at Calecut, the King of Cananor always knew all that happened to them, because he had sent people for that purpose to write to him everything. The Moors of Cananor, who received information from those of Calecut, in order to indispose the inclination of the King, used to tell him many lies about the Portuguese, that they used violence and arrogance in Calecut, and many other false tales with respect to which the King knew the truth. For which reason, one day that the Moors were thus relating these things to him, he said that no one should tell him lies, because he would order his head to be cut off for it. The King said this because he had already settled in his heart that he would establish as much peace with the Portuguese as they might be willing, because he was always talking to his soothsayers, who continually repeated what they had said to the King, and they said to him that the evils done in Calecut caused by the Moors would doubtless grow, and that the Portuguese would always do much harm to Calecut, and would destroy the Moors throughout India, and would turn them out of India, and they would never again possess the navigation which they now had. The King said that if that came to pass, that he also would receive great losses to his kingdom.

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Three Voyages of Vasco da Gama, and his Viceroyalty
From the Lendas da India of Gaspar Correa; accompanied by original documents
, pp. 224 - 235
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1869

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