It has also been suggested that Duarte Pacheco Pereira may have discovered the coasts of
Maranhão,
Pará and
Marajó island and the mouth of the
Amazon River in 1498, preceding the possible landings of the expeditions of
Amerigo Vespucci in 1499, of
Vicente Yáñez Pinzon in January 1500, and of Diego de Lepe in February 1500; and the
Cabral's expedition in April 1500, making him the first known European explorer of present-day
Brazil. This claim is based on interpretations of the cipher manuscript
Esmeraldo de Situ Orbis, written by Duarte Pacheco Pereira, which gives the following brief account: Most fortunate Prince, we have known and seen how in the third year of your reign in the year of Our Lord 1498, in which your Highness ordered us to discover the Western region, a very large landmass with many large islands adjacent, extending 70° North of the Equator, and located beyond the greatness of the Ocean, has been discovered and navigated; this distant land is densely populated and extends 28° degrees on the other side of the Equator towards the Antarctic Pole. Such is its greatness and length that on either side its end has not been seen or known, so that it is certain that it goes round the whole globe. Pereira drew a map of the world setting out this concept and referred to in chapter 5 of the
Esmeraldo, but it has since been lost. He said: “for the better understanding of our work, we have set here a painted map of the world, with the shape and description of these lands”. The 1519 world map by
Lopo Homem set out this concept, showing the
OCEANUS MERIDIONALIS and
INDICUM MARE (Atlantic and Indian Oceans) enclosed by the continental Earth. The world map compiled in 1513 from Portuguese sources by the Ottoman admiral and cartographer
Piri Reis is a map of this type, apparently derived from Pereira's. In their book
Foundations of the Portuguese empire, 1415-1580, historians Bailey Wallys, Boyd Shafer and George Winius, based in the Portuguese historian
Duarte Leite and other authors, make the following comment: "What really is important," Duarte Leite says, "is to know whether Pacheco arrived in Brazil before Alvares Cabral (April 22, 1500). In agreement with Luciano Pereira, such modern Portuguese historians as Faustino da Fonseca, Brito Rebelo, Lopes de Mendonça, and Jaime Cortesão say he did. . . as does Vignaud; and I believe he does not lack supporters in Brazil." "However," says Leite, "if Pacheco did discover areas east of the Line of Demarcation and did bring back news of this to [King] Manuel [of Portugal], the reason which induced Don Manuel to keep secret. . . such an important discovery escapes me. As soon as Cabral returned in 1501, Manuel announced the discovery of Brazil to Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain. Why would he not in 1499, after the return of
Vasco da Gama, make a similar announcement if Pacheco had already discovered Brazil? No objection could come on the part of Spain, given the division made by the Treaty of Tordesillas, as indeed none came in 1501 when Cabral's discovery was announced. I am persuaded that Pacheco neither discovered Brazil in 1498 nor was present two years later at its discovery by Cabral." Duarte Pacheco Pereira's
Esmeraldo de Situ Orbis is the first European navigation script book to mention the coast of Brazil. == Marriage and descendants ==