The Age of Exploration: Columbus, da Gama, and the Voyages That Globalized the World

Author:   Rafael N Carvalho
Publisher:   Independently Published
ISBN:  

9798196369681


Pages:   182
Publication Date:   10 May 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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The Age of Exploration: Columbus, da Gama, and the Voyages That Globalized the World


Overview

In the summer of 1497, four ships left the harbor at Lisbon and sailed toward the edge of everything known. They did not return for two years. When they did, the world was permanently, irrevocably different. This is that story. Before Columbus, before da Gama, before Magellan drove his starving fleet across a Pacific no European had ever crossed, the world existed as several separate worlds. The Americas, home to tens of millions of people and civilizations of breathtaking sophistication. Asia, the wealthiest region on earth. Africa, threaded with ancient trade routes and kingdoms of real power. Europe, hungry, ambitious, and running out of road. Then the ships sailed. What followed was the most consequential century in human history - a century of staggering courage and appalling violence, of navigational genius and colonial catastrophe, of maps redrawn and civilizations destroyed. In The Age of Exploration, historian Rafael N. Carvalho brings this world-altering era to life with the urgency of a thriller and the depth of serious scholarship. This is not a textbook. This is the story of what it actually felt like - to stand at the prow of a caravel watching the last familiar coastline disappear, to be a Taino person watching strange ships materialize on the horizon, to be the Zamorin of Calicut realizing that the politely insistent Portuguese traders had cannon on their ships and no intention of leaving. Follow Bartolomeu Dias as a thirteen-day storm accidentally carries him around the Cape of Good Hope. Watch Columbus convince himself, against all evidence, that the vast continent he has stumbled upon is a suburb of China. Sail with da Gama across the Indian Ocean, riding winds that Arab navigators had mastered for centuries. March with Cortés into Tenochtitlan, one of the most magnificent cities on earth - and watch him destroy it. Cross the Pacific with Magellan's desperate, starving crew and understand, at last, what the word vast truly means. But The Age of Exploration refuses to tell only half the story. For every admiral celebrated in Lisbon, there are millions whose names were never recorded - the Taino wiped from the Caribbean within a generation, the enslaved Africans packed into ships that crossed an ocean as cargo, the Aztec soldiers who fought for every street of a city being demolished around them, the Indian Ocean merchants whose centuries-old trading world was reorganized at gunpoint. Their story is here too. Because without it, the history of exploration is not history at all. It is mythology. Drawing on primary sources from four continents, Carvalho traces the full arc from Henry the Navigator's patient decades of African exploration to the moment Elcano's battered ship limped home to Seville with eighteen survivors and a hold full of cloves - the first human beings to circumnavigate the globe. Along the way, he examines the Columbian Exchange that transformed the diets of every continent, the silver of Potosi that funded empires and triggered inflation across the known world, the cartographic revolution that produced the first accurate maps, and the colonial structures whose shadows still fall, unmistakably, across the world we inhabit today. This is the book the Age of Exploration has always deserved. Rigorously researched. Compulsively readable. Honest about both the achievement and the cost. The ships left harbor five centuries ago. The world they made is the world you live in. It is time to understand how it happened. Includes a comprehensive Timeline of Key Events, A Note on Sources, and a curated bibliography for further reading.

Full Product Details

Author:   Rafael N Carvalho
Publisher:   Independently Published
Imprint:   Independently Published
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.249kg
ISBN:  

9798196369681


Pages:   182
Publication Date:   10 May 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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