The
Phoenicians sailed from this cape to trade with
Bronze Age Britain, with a possible point of landing for the Phoenician traders being
Mount Batten. As it is a prominent landfall on the route from
northern Europe to the
Mediterranean,
several naval battles took place near the Cape. Notable battles include the
First Battle of Cape Finisterre in 1747 during the
War of the Austrian Succession and the
Battle of Cape Finisterre in 1805 during the
Napoleonic Wars. Both these battles were between the
British Royal Navy and the
French Navy, who were constantly battling for
control of seas during the 18th century. The coast, known locally as the
Costa da Morte (Death Coast), has been the site of numerous
shipwrecks and founderings, including that of the British
ironclad HMS Captain, leading to the loss of nearly 500 lives, in 1870. Additionally, laws governing the colonies of the
British Empire (including the 1766 amendment to the
Sugar Act 1764) used the latitude of Cape Finisterre as the latitude past which certain goods could not be shipped north directly between British colonies. For instance, it was forbidden to ship
sugar cane directly from
Jamaica to
Nova Scotia, as such a transaction crossed through this latitude. Instead, the laws required that the sugar cane be shipped first from Jamaica to
Britain, where it would be re-exported to Nova Scotia. Likewise, the latitude of Cape Finisterre was used to signal that a
change of flags flown by Norwegian and Swedish merchant ships was required. Following independence and the subsequent union with Sweden in 1814, Norwegian merchant ships were required to fly the Swedish flag (until 1818) and the Swedish flag with the Norwegian (the Dannebrog with the Norwegian lion) flag in the
canton. From 1818 to 1821, Swedish merchant ships also flew this flag in place of the
Swedish flag (until 1844) when sailing south of Cape Finisterre. Finisterre was the former name of the current
FitzRoy sea area used in the
UK Shipping Forecast. It was renamed FitzRoy in 2002 (in honour of the founder of the
Met Office) to avoid confusion with the smaller sea area of the same name featuring in the marine forecasts produced by the French and Spanish meteorological offices. In the 2010s and 2020s, the waters of Cape Finisterrre have been the venue for several
orca attacks against
sailboats at
Atlantic Ocean. ==In popular culture==