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CHAPTER VIII - How the captain-major with all the fleet arrived before the city of Calecut, and of the damage and destruction which was done to it, and of the case of a miracle which happened

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2011

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Summary

The captain-major, on arriving at Calecut, was in a passion because he found the port cleared, and in it there was nothing to which he could do harm, because the Moors, knowing of his coming, had all fled, and hid their vessels and sambuks in the rivers; for they knew what the captain-major had done at Onor and Batticala, and what he had done to the ship Mount Dely, which belonged to a brother of Coja Casem, the factor of the sea of the King of Calecut. The King of Calecut thought that he might gain time so that the captain-major should not do him harm; and when his fleet arrived he sent him a Brahman of his in a boat with a white cloth fastened to a pole, as a sign of peace. This Brahman came dressed in the habit of a friar, one of those who had been killed in the country; and on reaching the ship, he asked for a safe conduct to enter. When it was known that he was not a friar,—-for the captain-major and everyone had been joyful, thinking that he was one of our friars,—seeing that he was not, the captain-major gave him a safe conduct, and bade him enter the ship.

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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. 326 - 334
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1869

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