The Portuguese navigator and explorer Diogo Cão …

Years: 1480 - 1491

The Portuguese navigator and explorer Diogo Cão is in 1484 ordered by King John II, as part of the search for a sea route to India and the Spice Islands, to advance south into undiscovered regions along the west coast of Africa.

While doing so, he is to choose some particularly salient points and claim them for Portugal by setting up on each a stone cross called padrão.

During his first voyage, thought to have taken place in 1482, he reached a place he called Monte Negro, now called Cabo de Santa Maria, roughly one hundred and fifty kilometers southwest of today’s Benguela, Angola.

During his second voyage, in 1484–1486, Cão reaches Cape Cross in January 1486, being the first European to visit this area.

During this voyage he proceeds about fourteen hundred kilometers farther than during the first one.

He is known to have erected two padrãos in the areas beyond his first voyage, one in Monte Negro, and the second at Cape Cross.

The current name of the place is derived from this padrão.

What can today be found at Cape Cross are two replicas of that first cross.

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