, "A cidade de Angra na ilha de Iesu xpō da Tercera que esta em 39. graos" There is some uncertainty in the date and the discoverer of the Azores. Nautical charts before the "official" discovery identified islands in the Atlantic Ocean as early as 1325, when a chart by
Angelino Dalorto identified "Bracile" west of Ireland, and later one by
Angelino Dulcert which identifies the
Canaries, and
Madeira, along with mysterious islands denominated as "Capraria" (which some historians suggest were São Miguel and Santa Maria). Legends also persisted of
Atlantis,
Sete Cidades (Kingdoms of the Seven Cities), the
Terras of São Brandão, the
Ilhas Aofortunadas (The Fortunate Islands), the
Ilha da Brasil (the Island of Brasil),
Antília, the
Ilhas Azuis (Blue Islands), and the
Terra dos Bacalhaus (Land of Codfish), and charts appeared between 1351 and 1439 of several groupings of islands with various names. The first association between the modern island of Terceira and these stories, was that of the island of Brasil; it first appears as
Insula de Brasil in the Venetian map of
Andrea Bianco (1436), attached to one of the larger islands of a group of islands in the Atlantic In 1439, the first official discovery document appeared, attributing the discovery of the
Formigas to
Gonçalo Velho Cabral. There is an indication that Terceira may have been discovered by Vicente de Lagos, Velho Cabral's pilot, on 1 January 1445: the first documents after this period started appearing with a third island in the Azorean archipelago, referred to as the
Ilha de Jesus Cristo (
Island of Jesus Christ), and later,
Ilha de Jesus Cristo da Terceira.
Gaspar Frutuoso, a chronicler and humanist, would later rationalize about the island's first name, noting that: • it was discovered on the first day of January, traditionally the feast day of the name of Jesus; • it was discovered by a captain in the
Order of Christ; • it was discovered on a Thursday or Friday, on
Corpo de Deus (
Body of Christ); or • because it was part of the dioceses of Angra, through the invocation of San Salvador (although this implies that a dioceses existed prior to its discovery). Regardless, it was only a temporary name, as the colloquial
Terceira (meaning "third" in Portuguese, as in "the third island" or "third to be discovered") was used more often to describe the island. The colonization of the island began by decree of
Henry the Navigator, dated 21 March 1450, and placed the island in the administrative hands of the Fleming
Jácome de Bruges. Its first settler was Fernão d'Ulmo, a Fleming or Frenchman, who later abandoned his plot for unknown reasons. where a small chapel was raised for the invocation of Santa Ana. Bruges made return trips to Flanders for new settlers to his colony. On one of his trips to Madeira, he conscripted
Diogo de Teive and assigned him as his lieutenant and overseer for the island of Terceira. A few years later, Bruges moved his residence to Praia, began construction on the Matriz Church in 1456, and administered the Captaincy of the island from this location (around 1460), until he mysteriously disappeared in 1474, on another of his trips between the colony and the continent. Apart from the Portuguese and Flemish settlers, colonists from Madeira, many slaves from Africa, new Christians and Jews populated the island at this time, developing new commercial ventures including wheat (exported during the 15th century throughout the empire), sugar-cane,
woad (for the dye industry) and woods (principally for the naval construction industries). This development would continue until the end of the 19th century, with the introduction of new products, including tea, tobacco and pineapple. During the
Portuguese succession crisis of 1580, the Azores was the only portion of the Portuguese overseas empire to resist the Spanish until the summer of 1583. Philip II of Spain had offered an amnesty if the Azores surrender, but his messenger met with a very hostile reception at Angra do Heroísmo (escaping to São Miguel, which had presented its allegiance to the King of Spain). Following the
Battle of Ponta Delgada, where Don Álvaro de Bazán, 1st Marquis of Santa Cruz defeated the Anglo-French supporters of D. António (the pretender to the Portuguese throne) off the coast of São Miguel, the Marquis concentrated his forces at a less defended beach from Angra do Heroísmo. With a fleet of ninety-six ships and 9,500 men (as well as a garrison of 2,000 on Sao Miguel) the Marquis was able to defeat the forces of D. António after one day's fighting. Although French and English soldiers on the island were allowed to retire unharmed, D. Antonio and a handful of his supporters were lucky to escape with their lives. One year later, the
conquest of the Azores was complete after the island of Terceira was reconciled, followed by the seizure of the
island of Faial. An English expedition fleet under the
Earl of Cumberland in 1589, as part of the
Azores Voyage of 1589 into
Angra Bay, attacked several harbouring Spanish and Portuguese ships and was able to sink or capture five. and portions of the island,
Jacob van Meurs, 1671 With the acclamation of
John IV of Portugal, the Azores applauded the restoration of independence from the
Iberian Union. This was not lost on the Spanish settlers in Angra do Heroísmo, who had become a privileged class during the Union, and which made it difficult for them to remain after 1640, when
Portuguese sovereignty was restored. In 1766, the reorganization of system of Captaincies was undertaken, resulting in one
Captain-General, with his seat in Angra do Heroísmo for the Azores. In 1810, a number of journalists and others considered to favor the French, including the industrialist
Jácome Ratton, were exiled to the island for a period. Political tension rose in the 1820s between constitutionalists or Liberals, (supporters of the constitutional monarchy installed by King
John VI of Portugal) and those who supported absolute monarchy. Having embraced the cause of constitutionalism, the local Terceirenses established a
Junta Provisória in the name of Queen
Maria II of Portugal in 1828.
Hostilities broke out at the
Battle of Praia da Vitória in 1829. In a decree, issued on 15 March 1830, Angra was named as Portuguese capital by the Terceirenses constitutional forces, who protected and supported exiled Liberals who supported the rights of Queen
Maria II of Portugal, whose rights were usurped by the
Miguelistas (supporters of the absolute monarchy of
Miguel I). In 1832,
Pedro I (former King and regent of Queen Maria) arrived in the Azores to form a government-in-opposition to the absolutionist regime in Lisbon, presided by the Marques of Palmela, and supported by Azoreans Mouzinho da Silveira and Almeida Garrett that developed many important reforms. Toward the end of WWII, Portugal went from becoming a neutral country to, in 1944, a
non-belligerent country in favor of the allies. A military agreement was signed with the
United States which allowed them to establish
Lajes Field on the island. The field had already been operational by the British who used the 1373 Treaty of Windsor to get approval to build an Air Force base and they brought in US equipment, but the US was not allowed to realistically use the base until Portugal agreed in 1944. On 24 August 2001, Terceira made the news as
Air Transat Flight 236 managed to land at
Lajes Field after running out of fuel in mid-air. On 16 March 2003, President of the United States
George W. Bush, UK Prime Minister
Tony Blair, Spanish Prime Minister
José María Aznar and Prime Minister of Portugal
José Manuel Barroso met on Terceira to discuss the
Invasion of Iraq, which began four days later, on 20 March. On 15 January 2016, then
Tropical Storm Alex made an unprecedented landfall on the island with sustained winds reaching 65 miles per hour. This landfall was unprecedented due to the time of year it occurred, which was mid-January. Alex is one of four known tropical cyclones to make landfall on the Island of Terceira, with the others being an unnamed hurricane in
1889, another unnamed hurricane in
1940, and
Hurricane Carrie in
1957. ==Geology and Geography==