Ferdinand Magellan's daring circumnavigation of the globe
in the sixteenth century was a three-year odyssey filled
with sex, violence, and amazing adventure. Now in Over the
Edge of the World, acclaimed author Laurence Bergreen,
interweaving a variety of candid, first-person accounts,
some previously unavailable in English, brings to life this
groundbreaking and majestic tale of discovery that changed
many long-held views about the world and the way explorers
would henceforth navigate its oceans.
In 1519 Magellan and his fleet set sail from Seville,
Spain, to find a water route to the Spice Islands in
Indonesia, where the most sought-after commodities --
cloves, pepper, and nutmeg -- flourished. Most important,
they were looking for a passageway, a strait, through the
great landmass of the Americas that would lead them to
these fabled islands. Laurence Bergreen takes readers on
board with Magellan and his crew as they explore, navigate,
mutiny, suffer, and die across the seas. He also recounts
the many unusual sexual practices the crew experienced,
from orgies in Brazil to bizarre customs in the South
Pacific. With a fleet of five ships and more than two
hundred men, they had set out in search of the Spice
Islands. Three years later they returned with an abundance
of spices from their intended destination, but with just
one ship carrying eighteen emaciated men. They suffered
starvation, disease, and torture, and many died, including
Magellan, who was violently killed in a fierce battle.
A man of great tenacity, cunning, and courage, Magellan was
full of contradictions. He was both heroic and foolish,
insightful yet blind, a visionary whose instincts outran
his ideals. Ambitious to a fault and not above using
torture and murder to maintain control of his ships and
sailors, he survived innumerable natural hazards in
addition to several violent mutinies aboard his own fleet
-- and it took no less than the massed forces of fifteen
hundred men to kill him.
This is the first time in nearly half a century that anyone
has attempted to narrate the complete story of Magellan's
unprecedented circumnavigation of the globe -- to tell this
truly gripping and profoundly important story of heroism,
discovery, and disaster. A voyage into history, a tour of
the world emerging from the Middle Ages into the
Renaissance, an anthropological account of tribes,
languages, and customs unknown to Europeans, and a
chronicle of a desperate grab for commercial and political
power, Over the Edge of the World is a captivating tale
that rivals the most exciting thriller fiction.