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  2. João da Gama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/João_da_Gama

    João da Gama (c. 1540 – after 1591) was a Portuguese explorer and colonial administrator in the Far East in the last quarter of the 16th century. He was the grandson of Vasco da Gama. João da Gama sailed from Macau to northeast and rounded Japan by north. He crossed the Pacific Ocean at the northernmost latitudes taken until then by Europeans.

  3. Gaspar da Gama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaspar_da_Gama

    Gaspar da Gama, also known as Gaspar da India and Gaspar de Almeida (c. 1444 – c. 1510), was an interpreter (língua in old Portuguese) and guide to several Portuguese exploratory fleets. He was of Jewish origin and was probably born in PoznaƄ in the Kingdom of Poland.

  4. Joana da Gama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joana_da_Gama

    During the second half of the century, possibly around 1555, she published the work Ditos da Freira - Ditos Diversos Feitos por uma Freira da Terceira Regra, Nos Quais se Contêm Sentenças Mui Notáveis e Avisos Necessários, (Sayings of the Nun - Various Sayings Made by a Nun of the Third Rule, which contain Very Notable Sentences and Necessary Notices), copies of which have survived to the ...

  5. Cristóvão da Gama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cristóvão_da_Gama

    Cristóvão (or Christopher) da Gama was the son of navigator Vasco da Gama and the younger brother of Estêvão da Gama. He first went to India in 1532 with his brother, returned to Portugal in 1535, and then joined Garcia de Noronha in sailing to Diu on 6 April 1538. Many times in these travels he demonstrated a quick mind that saved his ...

  6. Battle of Calicut (1503) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Calicut_(1503)

    In one of the first recorded instances of a naval line of battle, Gama's spice naus and escort caravels sailed in a line end-to-end, concentrating all their immense firepower as they passed against the twenty large Arab ships of Cojambar, before they could get organized, sinking a number of them and doing immense damage to the remainder.

  7. Croatian Wikipedia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croatian_Wikipedia

    Croatian Wikipedia sitenotice that translates to "official and public refutation of yellow journalism by Jutarnji list". In September 2013, complaints about right-wing bias of administrators and editors on the Croatian Wikipedia began to receive attention from the media, following the launch of a Facebook page titled Razotkrivanje sramotne hr.wikipedije (Exposing the disgraceful Croatian ...

  8. Battle of El Tor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_El_Tor

    In 1538, the Ottoman Empire had sailed a large armada to India and sieged the Portuguese fortress of Diu in Gujarat, but failing to take it, returned to Egypt.Two years later, the Portuguese Governor of India Dom Estevão da Gama assembled a fleet of 80 ships to undertake a retaliatory campaign against the Ottomans within the Red Sea, as far as Suez.

  9. Battle of Wofla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Wofla

    The Battle of Wofla was fought on August 28, 1542, near Lake Ashenge in Wofla (Ofla) between the Portuguese under Cristóvão da Gama and the forces of Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi. Reinforced with a superiority not only in numbers but in firearms, Imam Ahmad was victorious and forced the Portuguese, along with Queen Seble Wongel and her ...