Cape Chaunar Explained

Official Name:Cape Chaunar
Other Name:Cabo de Não (Cape Nun)
Pushpin Map:Morocco
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Pushpin Mapsize:300
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Morocco
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Morocco
Coordinates:29.2667°N -28°W

Cape Chaunar, Cap Uarsig, Cape Nun, Cap Noun, Cabo de Não or Nant[1] is a cape on the Atlantic coast of Africa, in southern Morocco, between Tarfaya and Sidi Ifni. By the 15th century it was considered insurmountable by Arabs and Europeans, thus resulting in the name meaning cape "no" in Portuguese. Cape Chaunar is the true northern coastal limit of the Sahara desert, although nearby Cape Bojador is frequently mistakenly called this.[2]

History

The thirteenth-century Genovese navigators Vandino and Ugolino Vivaldi may have sailed as far as Cape Non before being lost at sea. It was named Cabo do Não ("Cape No") by Portuguese mariners during the fifteenth century, being considered the impassable limit for Arab and European sailors, the non plus ultra beyond which no navigation could occur. This was due to the cape running far out into the sea, causing it to break and appear dangerous.[3] "Quem o passa tornará ou não" (whoever passes it will make it or not), wrote Venetian explorer Alvise Cadamosto in his book Navigazione.Starting in 1417, exploratory vessels were sent by Prince Henry the Navigator, managing to cross Cape Non and reaching Cape Bojador, then considered the southern limit of the world, stretching into the "dark sea"[4] (Latin Mare Tenebrarum, Mare Tenebrosum or Bahr al-Zulumat in Arabic), the medieval name for the southern Atlantic Ocean, inaccessible to the sailors of the time.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Alexandre Magno de Castilho,"Descripção e roteiro da costa occidental de Africa: desde o cabo de Espartel até o das Agulhas, Volume 1", p.62, Imprensa Nacional, 1866 (description of the western African coast in Portuguese)
  2. Alexandre Magno de Castilho,"Descripção e roteiro da costa occidental de Africa", p.65
  3. [John Locke]
  4. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Progress_and_Prosperity/_Ro9AAAAYAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PP1&printsec=frontcover William D'Hertburn, Progress and Prosperity: The Old World and Its Remaking Into the New, 1911