Saturday, September 26, 2009

Not polar bears or politics but interesting


Earliest use of "new found land" -- Canadian history is interesting but often overlooked (even here) in favour of the history of other nations. (Picture of Hen ry VII right)



Newly discovered letter reveals 1499 expedition to Canada


By Randy Boswell

British historians have unearthed a letter written 510 years ago by King Henry VII that sheds startling new light on Canadian history.


The letter reveals a previously unknown English expedition to this country in 1499 and appears to add the name of William Weston, an obscure shipping merchant from the west England port of Bristol, to the pantheon of early New World explorers.


The regal dispatch, believed to have been written the year after Anglo-Italian navigator John Cabot perished on his second voyage of discovery to Canada, indicates that Weston was set to embark on his own transatlantic journey to "serche and fynde" the same distant territory.
Specifically, the king names Weston's destination as "the new founde land" reached by Cabot in June 1497: the first European landfall in North America since the age of the Vikings.


That makes Henry's letter, believed to have been written on March 12, 1499, the earliest known use of the phrase that would eventually be used to designate Canada's easternmost province.
Until now, the first mention of "new found land" in connection with Canada's Atlantic shore was from a 1502 entry in Henry VII's royal daybook.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Now you have opened a kettle of worms. What will Nova Scotia do now? They claim Newfoundlanders to be liars....it's Nova Scotia that John Cabot discovered. A. Morris

James C Morton said...

Oh dear!!!!!

sassy said...

That’s fascinating.