Both the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds have been easily visible for southern nighttime observers well back into prehistory. It has been claimed that the first known written mention of the Large Magellanic Cloud was by the
Persian astronomer '
Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi Shirazi (later known in
Europe as "Azophi"), which he referred to as
Al Bakr, the White Ox, in his
Book of Fixed Stars around 964 AD. However, this seems to be a misunderstanding of a reference to some stars south of
Canopus which he admits he had not seen. The first confirmed recorded observation was in a letter written in 1502 by
Amerigo Vespucci after his second voyage. He mentioned "three Canopi, two bright and one obscure"; "bright" refers to the two
Magellanic Clouds, and "obscure" refers to the
Coalsack. : the LMC is the green circle at the south (bottom) of picture
Ferdinand Magellan sighted the LMC on his voyage in 1519 and his writings brought it into common
Western knowledge. The galaxy now bears his name. The galaxy and southern end of Dorado are in the current epoch at opposition on about 5 December when thus visible from sunset to sunrise from equatorial points such as Ecuador, the Congos, Uganda, Kenya and Indonesia and for part of the night in nearby months. Above about
28° south, such as most of Australia and South Africa, the galaxy is always sufficiently above the horizon to be considered properly
circumpolar, thus during spring and autumn the cloud is also visible much of the night, and the height of winter in June nearly coincides with closest proximity to the Sun's apparent position. Measurements with the
Hubble Space Telescope, announced in 2006, suggest the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds may be moving too quickly to be orbiting the
Milky Way. Astronomers discovered a new black hole inside the Large Magellanic Cloud in November 2021 using the
European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope in
Chile. Astronomers claim its gravity is influenced by a nearby star, which is about five times the mass of the Sun. In March 2025, the Center for Astrophysics announced strong evidence for a
supermassive black hole in the Large Magellanic Cloud, the second-closest besides
Sagittarius A*, with an estimated mass 600,000 times that of the Sun. ==Geometry==