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  • April 1, 1794
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The Freemasons' Magazine, April 1, 1794: Page 56

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Page 56

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he served some time under the command of the Viceroy Almeyda , till he was himself made governor of the Portuguese conquests in those parts , which was in the year 1510 , during which time the whole business was to settle trade , build forts , and erect factories along the coasts already known , that is , all the east side of Africa , the shores of Arabia , PersiaGuzaratCambayaDecan , > Canaraand Malabar ; and , indeed ,

, , , , they had employment enough , if well followed , to have held them many more years . But avarice and ambition know no bounds ; the Portuguese had not yetpassed Cape , Comorin , the utmost extent . of the Malabar coast , and , therefore , Anno 1510 , James Lopez de Seqiieira Was sent from Lisbon with orders to sail as far as Malacca ; this is a city seated on that peninsula

formerly called Aurea Chersonesus , running out into the Indian sea from the main land , to which it is joined by a narrow neck of land , OH the north , and on the south separated ^ from the island of Sumatra by a small strait or channel : Malacca was at that time the greatest emporium of all the farther India . ' Thither Sequeira was sent to settle trade , or rather to discover what advantages might be gained ; but the Moors

who watched to destroy him , having failed of their design to murder him at an entertainment , contrived to get thirty of his men ashore on pretence of loading spice , and then falling on them and the ships at the same time , killed ei ght Portuguese , took sixty , and the ships with difli--culty got away . However , here we have Malacca discovered , and at way open to all the further parts of India .. In his ,. way to Malacca ,

Sequeira made peace with the kings of Achem ; Pedir , arid Pacem * all at that time small princes at the north-west end of the island Sumatra . Whilst Sequeira was thus employed , Albuquerque assaults the famous city of Goa , seated in a small island on the coast of Decan , and taking the inhabitants unprovided , made himself master of it , but enjoyed it not long ; for Hidalcan , the former owner , returning with 60 , 009 men , drove him out of itafter a siege of 20 days : yet the next year he

, again took it by force , and it has ever since continued in the hands of the Portuguese , and been the metropolis of all their dominions in the , east , being made an archbishop's see , ' and the residence of the viceroy who has the government of all the conquests in those parts . Albuquerque , flushed with this success , as soon as he had settled all safe at Goasailed for Malacca with 1400 fihting men in 19 ships . Bthe

, g y way he took five ships , and , at his arrival on the coast of Sumatra , was complimented by the kings of Pedir and Pacem . It is not unworthy relating in this place that , in one of the ships taken at this time , was found Nehoada Beegtiea , one of the chief contrivers of the treachery against Sequeira ; and though he had received several mortal wounds , yet not one drop of blood came from him ; but as soon as a bracelet , of

bone was taken off his arm , the blood gushed out at all parts , " The Indians said this was the bone of a beast called Cabis , which some will have to be found in Siam , and others in the island of Java , which has this strange virtue , but none has ever been found since . This being looked upon as a great treasure , was sent b y Albuquerque to the king of Portugal , but the ship it went in was cast away , so that we have lost :

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-04-01, Page 56” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 20 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01041794/page/56/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 2
Untitled Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 4
THE PRESENT STATE OF FREE MASONRY. Article 6
A CURE FOR ENVY. Article 9
JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, Article 10
CHARACTER OF EDWARD STILLINGFLEET, Article 13
CHARACTER OF CICERO. Article 15
LIFE OF THE RIGHT REVEREND GEORGE HORNE, Article 18
MEMOIRS OF THE LATE DR. PAUL HIFFERNAN. Article 25
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 32
A NARRATIVE Article 34
ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY, &c. Article 43
PLAN OF EDUCATION. Article 49
PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 52
THE WONDERFUL CUNNING OF A FOX. Article 57
MEMORABLE SPEECH OF THEOPHRASTUS Article 57
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 58
POETRY. Article 65
MASONIC SONG. Article 66
A LYRIC ODE, BY GRAY. Article 66
CONTEST BETWEEN THE LIPS AND EYES. Article 67
LINES Article 68
Untitled Article 69
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 71
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 75
DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 78
BANKRUPTS. Article 81
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Page 56

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Progress Of Navigation.

he served some time under the command of the Viceroy Almeyda , till he was himself made governor of the Portuguese conquests in those parts , which was in the year 1510 , during which time the whole business was to settle trade , build forts , and erect factories along the coasts already known , that is , all the east side of Africa , the shores of Arabia , PersiaGuzaratCambayaDecan , > Canaraand Malabar ; and , indeed ,

, , , , they had employment enough , if well followed , to have held them many more years . But avarice and ambition know no bounds ; the Portuguese had not yetpassed Cape , Comorin , the utmost extent . of the Malabar coast , and , therefore , Anno 1510 , James Lopez de Seqiieira Was sent from Lisbon with orders to sail as far as Malacca ; this is a city seated on that peninsula

formerly called Aurea Chersonesus , running out into the Indian sea from the main land , to which it is joined by a narrow neck of land , OH the north , and on the south separated ^ from the island of Sumatra by a small strait or channel : Malacca was at that time the greatest emporium of all the farther India . ' Thither Sequeira was sent to settle trade , or rather to discover what advantages might be gained ; but the Moors

who watched to destroy him , having failed of their design to murder him at an entertainment , contrived to get thirty of his men ashore on pretence of loading spice , and then falling on them and the ships at the same time , killed ei ght Portuguese , took sixty , and the ships with difli--culty got away . However , here we have Malacca discovered , and at way open to all the further parts of India .. In his ,. way to Malacca ,

Sequeira made peace with the kings of Achem ; Pedir , arid Pacem * all at that time small princes at the north-west end of the island Sumatra . Whilst Sequeira was thus employed , Albuquerque assaults the famous city of Goa , seated in a small island on the coast of Decan , and taking the inhabitants unprovided , made himself master of it , but enjoyed it not long ; for Hidalcan , the former owner , returning with 60 , 009 men , drove him out of itafter a siege of 20 days : yet the next year he

, again took it by force , and it has ever since continued in the hands of the Portuguese , and been the metropolis of all their dominions in the , east , being made an archbishop's see , ' and the residence of the viceroy who has the government of all the conquests in those parts . Albuquerque , flushed with this success , as soon as he had settled all safe at Goasailed for Malacca with 1400 fihting men in 19 ships . Bthe

, g y way he took five ships , and , at his arrival on the coast of Sumatra , was complimented by the kings of Pedir and Pacem . It is not unworthy relating in this place that , in one of the ships taken at this time , was found Nehoada Beegtiea , one of the chief contrivers of the treachery against Sequeira ; and though he had received several mortal wounds , yet not one drop of blood came from him ; but as soon as a bracelet , of

bone was taken off his arm , the blood gushed out at all parts , " The Indians said this was the bone of a beast called Cabis , which some will have to be found in Siam , and others in the island of Java , which has this strange virtue , but none has ever been found since . This being looked upon as a great treasure , was sent b y Albuquerque to the king of Portugal , but the ship it went in was cast away , so that we have lost :

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