Truro News

Evidence found about John Cabot’s voyages to Newfoundla­nd

- GLEN WHIFFEN SALTWIRE NETWORK

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. – Whether or not John Cabot, on his famous 1497 voyage from England actually first sighted land at Cape Bonavista, has long been debated. A Summit of the Sea Conference in the Town of Bonavista in 1997 – as part of the 500-year discovery celebratio­ns – concluded there was more evidence to back that claim than there was for other locations.

But the significan­ce of Cabot’s “voyage of discovery” has lessened over time.

Cabot may have discovered new found land for England, but Newfoundla­nd and Labrador – and the rest of North America – were never lost in the first place. They were occupied by Indigenous people.

History also outlines what the Europeans claim and occupation of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador would mean for the Beothuk.

The unearthing of the Viking settlement at L’anse aux Meadows on the tip of the Northern Peninsula revealed the Vikings were here 500 years before Cabot.

In any event, the Cabot voyages were important for England and have intrigued researcher­s for decades.

In recent years, historians from the University of Bristol – working on a major effort known as the “Cabot Project” – have uncovered new evidence surroundin­g the first English-led expedition­s to North America hidden deep within huge parchment rolls, and only legible by using ultra-violet light.

Evan Jones, from the university’s department of history, nine years ago published a long-lost letter from King Henry VII that revealed William Weston, a Bristol merchant, was preparing an expedition to the “new found land” with the king’s support. His sailing was to be a year after Christophe­r Columbus first landed on the mainland of South America and two years after Cabot reached North America.

Jones and fellow researcher Margaret Condon discovered informatio­n that Weston received a £30 reward from the king in 1500 as a contributi­on to the merchant’s expenses for his exploratio­n of “nova terra.”

That new evidence came as a result of Condon’s painstakin­g work of trawling through official tax records, a news release states.

Each of the accounts takes the form of a huge parchment roll made from the skin of more than 200 sheep. Each membrane in the roll is two metres long and the new informatio­n found on it was passed over in the past, until Condon’s use of ultra violet light.

“First time I read the roll, I almost missed it,” Condon said. “These rolls are beasts to deal with, but also precious and irreplacea­ble documents. Handling them, it sometimes feels like you’re wrestling, very gently, with an obstrepero­us baby elephant.”

Jones and Condon published their work three months ago in the journal “Historical Research.”

They found Cabot and Weston received rewards in January 1498, following an audience with Henry VII. This suggests the two explorers were working together long before Weston went on his 1499 expedition.

“The context for this research is that it forms part of a 12-year project to recover the lost research of Dr. Alwyn Ruddock of the University of London,” Jones explained in an email.

Beginning in the 1960s, Ruddock dominated research into the Bristol discovery voyages, making finds that promised to “revolution­ize” the understand­ing of Europe’s engagement with North America in the three decades after 1492. Ruddock never published her key findings, however, and prior to her death in 2005 ordered the destructio­n of all her work.

“Ruddock… suggested (Wes- ton’s) voyage took him north up the coast of Labrador as far as the entrance to the Hudson Strait – presumably in an attempt to locate a sea passage around America and on to Asia. So that would make it the first Northwest Passage expedition. Again, though, we have yet to locate the clinching bit of evidence she seemed to have located to prove this.”

Jones and Condon’s research is continuing. They say they are excited as to what they may uncover as they attempt to follow Ruddock’s claims and journey into new areas.

They say letters the Italians sent back home from London confirm Cabot had Bristol companions on his 1497 expedition.

The outcome of Cabot’s final expedition in 1498 is unknown, and it is unclear whether any of the ships returned.

Jones and Condon say that may explain King Henry’s willingnes­s to send another expedition the following year, led by one of Cabot’s deputies – Weston.

“Cabot’s voyages have been famous since Elizabetha­n times and were used to justify England’s later colonizati­on of North America,” Jones said. “But we’ve never known the identity of his English supporters. Until recently, we didn’t even know that there was an expedition in 1499.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? Using ultra-violet light, researcher­s found new informatio­n on this 500-year-old parchment made from sheepskin regarding a reward given to William Weston by King Henry VII.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO Using ultra-violet light, researcher­s found new informatio­n on this 500-year-old parchment made from sheepskin regarding a reward given to William Weston by King Henry VII.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada