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LANCILOTO MALOCELLO (" LANZAROTE, the...

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 494 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LANCILOTO

MALOCELLO ("
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LANZAROTE, the ` Lancelot Maloisiel ' of the French ")
  , leader of the first of
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modern
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European oceanic enterprises . This was a Genoese expedition, which about 1270 seems to have sailed into the Alantic, re-discovered the " Fortunate Islands " or Canaries, and made something of a
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conquest and settlement in one of the most northerly isles of this
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archipelago, still known (after the
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Italian captain) as
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Lanzarote . According to a
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Spanish authority of about 1345, the
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anonymous Franciscan's Conos4imiento de todos los reinos, "Lancarote" was killed by the Canarian natives; but the castle built by him was
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standing in 1402–1404, when it was utilized for the storage of grain by the French conquerors under Gadifer de la Salle . To Malocello's enterprise, moreover, it is probable that Petrarch (born 1304) alludes when he tells how, within the memory of his parents; an armed
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fleet of Genoese penetrated to the Fortunatae "; this passage some would refer, without sufficient authority, to the expedition of 1291 . Malocello's name and
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nationality are certainly preserved by those early Portolani or scientific charts (such as the " Dulcert " of 1339 and the " Laurentian Portolano " of 1351), in which the
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African islands appear, for the first time in
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history, in clear and recognizable form . Thus Dulcert reads Insula de Lanzarotus and Marocelus, the Laurentian map I. de Lanzarote, against Lanzarote Island, which is well depicted on both designs, and marked with the
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cross of Genoa . The ConosQimiento (as noticed above) explicitly derives the island-name from the . Genoese
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commander who perished here . Malocello's enterprise not only marks the beginning of the oversea expansion of western
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Europe in exploration, conquest and colonization (after the age of Scandinavian
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world-roving had passed) ; it is also probably not unconnected with the
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great Genoese venture of 1291 (in search of a waterway to India, which soon follows), with which this attempt at Canarian
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discovery and dominion has been by some unjustifiably identified . See the Conoscimiento, p. too, as edited by Marcos Jimenez de la Espada in the Boletin de la sociedad geogrdfica de
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Madrid,
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February 1877) ; Le Canarien in P . Margry, Conque"te
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des . Canaries, Co .

177; M . A . P. d'Avezac in vol. vi.,

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part ii., of L' Univers, pp . 1–41 (Iles africaines de l' ocean atlantique) ; C . R . Beazley, Dawn of Modern Geography, iii . 411–413, 449, 451 .

End of Article: LANCILOTO MALOCELLO (" LANZAROTE, the ` Lancelot Maloisiel ' of the French ")
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