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Kwaaihoek's True Cross

Farmer's Weekly

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May 01, 2020

In 1488, Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias erected a stone cross on the Eastern Cape coast. Within decades, it had disappeared and even its location was lost. In the 20th century, thanks to the determination of a dedicated historian, the cross, by then in thousands of fragments, was recovered and lovingly reconstructed,

- Mike Burgess

Kwaaihoek's True Cross

In the foyer of the University of the Witwatersrand’s William Cullen Library is Bartolomeu Dias’s Padrão de São Gregorio, named in honor of Saint Gregory. More than 530 years old, the almost 2m-tall structure is testimony not only to a historic voyage of discovery, but to the perseverance of a remarkable academic, Dr. Eric Axelson of the university’s Department of History.

EN ROUTE TO THE EAST

From the early 1480s to the late 1490s, three Portuguese seafarers, Diogo Cão, Bartolomeu Dias and Vasco da Gama, sailing their small, swift, lateen-rigged caravels, forged a route from Europe to India around Southern Africa. During this period, they erected more than 10 padrãos along the West, Southern and East African coasts.

These inscribed limestone structures, each comprising a small cross atop a tall pillar, were erected to stake Portugal’s claim to parts of Africa, and as symbols of Christianity.

Farmer's Weekly'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

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