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The Malagueta Coast can serve as a classic example of a region which was integrated into the world economy as a result of world demand for its resources-spices and labor in the fifteenth/sixteenth centuries, and again in the nineteenth century palm oil, cocos fiber, and labor-and has sunk into oblivion once the demand ceased. It is similar with Liberia's rubber and iron ore industry of the twentieth century. I had wanted to write this paper, which reconstructs the discovery and commercial exploitation of the coast through a systematic analysis of published maps and reports, ever since I walked and paddled along this coast in 1968. Furthermore I intend to review the discovery of the coast in the perspective of overall Portuguese policy and politics (interior and foreign). Last, but not least, this is to help students of Liberian and West African history with a review of the early sources-among which maps are by far the most abundant.
The Portuguese legacy to Africa is enshrined in coastal toponymy until today. Avelino Teixeira da Mota in his "Topónimos de origem portuguesa" focused on Portuguese names still surviving in the nineteenth century, but I will focus here on contemporary fifteenth- and sixteenth-century nomenclature and what it might reveal about the African discoveries. The Portuguese initially were attracted by gold at the Rio d'Ouro (later Spanish Sahara), then slaves, and eventually malagueta-a substitute for Indian pepper- commodities known on the Lisbon market and which served to name the coasts: malagueta, marfim, ouro, esclavos. Diogo Gomes was the first to actually see Malagueta on the Gambia in 1445, but the malagueta coast was not discovered until after Henry's the Navigator's death in 1460.
Some of the early names were attributed to physical features such as Cabo das Palmas, Cabo Monserrado, Cabo do Monte, or Rio Junco; others relate to the day of their discovery, e.g. Sam Paulo, Santa Maria, S. Clemente, Santa Apollonia, San Tomé. Others again indicating human and commercial activities have disappeared. But many names have survived, such as Sierra Leone, Lagos, Cameroons, and Gabon, and were even resuscitated (e.g, Zaire), while others have vanished. But those latter are preserved in maps or reports, and point to European-African interactions and exchanges which would otherwise remain obscure.
Here...