Ancient Plutarch in his
Parallel Lives (
Sertorius, 75 AD) referring to the military commander
Quintus Sertorius (d. 72 BC), relates that after his return to
Cádiz, he met sailors who spoke of idyllic Atlantic islands: "The islands are said to be two in number separated by a very narrow strait and lie from Africa. They are called the
Isles of the Blessed." Archaeological evidence suggests that the islands may have been visited by the
Vikings sometime between 900 and 1030. Accounts by
Muhammad al-Idrisi state that the Mugharrarin ("the adventurers" – seafarers from Lisbon) came across an island where they found "a huge quantity of sheep, the meat of which was bitter and inedible" before going on to the more inhabited
Canary Islands (now a territory of
Spain). This island, possibly Madeira or
Hierro, must have been inhabited or previously visited by people for livestock to be present.
Legend During the reign of King
Edward III of England, lovers
Robert Machim and Anna d'Arfet were said to have fled from England to France in 1346. Driven off course by a violent storm, their ship ran aground along the coast of an island that may have been Madeira. Later, this legend was the basis of the naming of the city of
Machico on the island, in memory of the young lovers.
European exploration Madeira appears in several medieval manuscripts, including the
Book of Knowledge of All Kingdoms from the early 14th century, the
Medici-Laurentian Atlas from 1351, the
Soleri Portolani from 1380 and 1385 and
Corbitis Atlas from the late 14th century. These texts refer to Madeira as
Lecmane,
Lolegname, Legnami (the isle of wood),
Puerto or Porto Santo,
deserte or deserta, and
desierta. It is widely accepted that knowledge of these Atlantic islands existed before their better-documented discovery and successful settlement by the
Kingdom of Portugal. In 1418, two captains,
João Gonçalves Zarco and
Tristão Vaz Teixeira, while exploring the African coast in the service of Prince
Henry the Navigator, were driven off course by a storm to an island which they named (English: "holy harbour") in gratitude for divine deliverance from a shipwreck. The following year, Zarco and Vaz organised an expedition with
Bartolomeu Perestrello. The trio travelled to the island of Porto Santo, claimed it on behalf of the Portuguese Crown, and established a settlement. The new settlers observed "a heavy black cloud suspended to the southwest" and upon investigation discovered the larger island they called ().
Settlement The first Portuguese settlers began colonizing the islands around 1420 or 1425. The three governors, knights of the
Order of Christ and navigators: João Gonçalves Zarco, Tristão Vaz Teixeira and Bartolomeu Perestrelo, along with their respective families, became the first settlers of the archipelago, divided by three captaincies (respectively Funchal, Machico and Porto Santo). By order of King João I, this colonization process began in 1425 with people of modest means, some former prisoners of the Kingdom, and a group of lower ranking nobles. Included were fishermen and peasant farmers who willingly left Portugal in hopes of a better life than was possible in the
Black Death ravaged mainland, wherein nobility strictly controlled the best farmlands. Initially, the settlers produced wheat for their own sustenance. Still, they later began to export wheat to mainland Portugal. In earlier times, fish and vegetables were the settlers' main means of subsistence.
Sugar island Grain production began to fall, and the ensuing crisis forced
Henry the Navigator to order other commercial crops to be planted so that the islands could be profitable. These specialised plants, and their associated industrial technology, created one of the major revolutions on the islands and fuelled Portuguese industry. Following the introduction of the first water-driven sugar mill on Madeira, sugar production increased to over 6,000
arrobas (an
arroba was equal to ) by 1455, using advisers from
Sicily and financed by
Genoese capital (Genoa acted as an integral part of the island economy until the 17th century). The accessibility of Madeira attracted Genoese and
Flemish traders, who were keen to bypass
Venetian monopolies. Sugar production was the primary engine of the island's economy, which quickly afforded the Funchal metropolis economic prosperity. The production of sugar cane attracted adventurers and merchants from all parts of Europe, especially
Italians,
Basques,
Catalans, and
Flemish. This meant that, in the second half of the fifteenth century, the city of Funchal became a mandatory port of call for European trade routes. Enslaved workers were critical to the sugar boom which peaked about 1506, labouring not only in the cane fields and sugar mills but also in the construction and maintenance of the system of irrigating
levadas which remain one of the most distinctive features of the Madeiran landscape. The enslaved consisted of
Guanches from the nearby
Canary islands, captured
Berbers, and after further exploration of the African coast, West Africans. Their numbers declined as the industry they were used to pioneer transferred
São Tomé and Príncipe and to the much larger plantations of
Brazil, the
Guianas and the
West Indies. While Madeira, itself, became a victim of the slave trade when in 1617
Barbary corsairs carried off
1,200 people from Porto Santo, it was to maintain chattel slavery until 1775/77 after it had been abolished in the Kingdom of Portugal. Sugar plantations were replaced by vineyards, originating in the so-called 'Wine Culture', which acquired international fame and provided the rise of a new social class, the
Bourgeoisie. With the increase of commercial treaties with England, important English merchants settled on the Island and, ultimately, controlled the increasingly important island wine trade. The English traders settled in Funchal in the seventeenth century, consolidating the markets from North America, the
West Indies and England itself. The
Madeira wine became very popular in the markets, and it is also said to have been used in a toast during the
Declaration of Independence by the
Founding Fathers of the United States. with its tower of 15th-century
Gothic style in the background Due to high demand during the season, there was a need to prepare guides for visitors. The first tourist guide to Madeira appeared in 1850 and focused on the island's history, geology,
flora,
fauna and customs. Regarding hotel infrastructures, the British and the Germans were the first to launch the Madeiran hotel chain. The historic
Belmond Reid's Palace opened in 1891 as the "Reid's New Hotel" and is still open to this day. This early tourist trade came to depend on the supposed healing qualities of the island's climate such that, when in the twentieth century surer treatments for tuberculosis were discovered, the number of visitors fell off sharply. A detachment of the
85th Regiment of Foot under Lieutenant-colonel
James Willoughby Gordon garrisoned the island. After the
Peace of Amiens, British troops withdrew in 1802, only to reoccupy Madeira in 1807 until the end of the
Peninsular War in 1814. In 1846,
James Julius Wood wrote a series of seven sketches of the island. In 1856, British troops recovering from
cholera, and widows and orphans of soldiers fallen in the
Crimean War, were stationed in Funchal, Madeira.
The world wars During the
Great War on 3 December 1916, a
German U-boat, , entered
Funchal harbour on Madeira.
U-38 torpedoed and sank three ships, bringing the war to Portugal. After attacking the ships,
U-38 bombarded Funchal for two hours from a range of about . Batteries on Madeira returned fire and eventually forced
U-38 to withdraw. On 12 December 1917, two German U-boats,
SM U-156 and
SM U-157 , again bombarded Funchal. There were three fatalities and 17 wounded; several houses and the Santa Clara church were hit. The last
Austrian Emperor,
Charles I, was exiled to Madeira after the war. Determined to prevent an attempt to restore Charles to the throne, the Council of Allied Powers agreed he could go into exile on Madeira because it was isolated in the Atlantic and easily guarded. He died there on 1 April 1922 and his coffin lies in a chapel of the
Church of Our Lady of Monte.
Portugal in World War II was neutral, but maintained ties to the Britain dating from the
Treaty of Windsor (1386). As a result, Madeira took 2,000 evacuees from
Gibraltar. Many of the Gibraltarians (fondly remembered as Gibraltinos), married locally and stayed on after the war. Some 200 were Jewish. and in Funchal they found a
Jewish cemetery that belonged to the Abudarham family, the same family after whom the
Abudarham Synagogue is named in Gibraltar.
Economic depression, emigration and revolt Between the wars, the
Great Depression found the island already in a prolonged economic crisis. When the national government took control over imported grain, the price of flour and bread on the island rose dramatically strikes and riots began broke out. Against this background, in April 1931 the island's garrison participated in a military uprising against the government of the
National Dictatorship. Forces sent from the mainland crushed the
Madeira uprising only after seven days of fighting. The growing distress of the islanders accelerated a long-established pattern of emigration to Africa and the Americas. This contributed to the existence today of 350,000 Madeirans and their descendants in
South Africa. and 200,000 in
Venezuela, communities from which in the 21st century there have been many "returnees".
Autonomy In the wake of the 1974
Carnation Revolution in Lisbon, there was a purported Madeira independence movement. Over the next four years, the
Madeira Archipelago Liberation Front (), or FLAMA, carried out around 200 bomb attacks on the island (with one fatality). It may have represented more a reaction by some of the regional elites to the advance of the political left in the revolution, than truly
ethnic or
separatist sentiment. The
1976 Constitution granted Madeira an autonomous administration with its own legislature. ==Geography==