Diogo Gomes
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- Flourished:
- 1440–84
- Flourished:
- 1440 - 1484
Diogo Gomes (flourished 1440–84) was a Portuguese explorer sent by Prince Henry the Navigator to investigate the West African coast about 1456.
Gomes sailed south beyond the Gêba River, now in Guinea-Bissau, and on the return trip ascended the Gambia River to the town of Cantor (now Kuntaur, Gambia), where he met men from Tombouctou (Timbuktu). Illness among his crew precluded exploration any farther inland. On a second voyage, about 1460, he landed at São Tiago (Santiago) in the Cape Verde Islands. Though he later claimed to have discovered this island group, it had allegedly been visited in 1456 by Alvise Ca’da Mosto (Cadamosto), a Venetian in the service of Prince Henry.
The reliability of the routes and dates in Gomes’ account of his voyages, dictated in 1484 to the German geographer Martin Behaim, is considered questionable.