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He was married to Inês de Castro (a sister of D. [[João de Castro]] who was later to become the fourth viceroy of Portuguese India); with her he had four children. Moreover, he was a nephew of [[Afonso de Albuquerque]]. |
He was married to Inês de Castro (a sister of D. [[João de Castro]] who was later to become the fourth viceroy of Portuguese India); with her he had four children. Moreover, he was a nephew of [[Afonso de Albuquerque]]. |
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He was a successor to the governor-general [[Nuno da Cunha]], nominated by a royal decree of 18 March 1538 as [[viceroy]] of [[Portuguese India|Estado da Índia]] by King [[John III of Portugal|John III]]. The King gave him the title of viceroy, and not just governor-general, in order to impress the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] power that at the time threatened Portuguese possessions in Asia.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Vila-Santa |first=Nuno |date=2015-09-02 |
He was a successor to the governor-general [[Nuno da Cunha]], nominated by a royal decree of 18 March 1538 as [[viceroy]] of [[Portuguese India|Estado da Índia]] by King [[John III of Portugal|John III]]. The King gave him the title of viceroy, and not just governor-general, in order to impress the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] power that at the time threatened Portuguese possessions in Asia.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Vila-Santa |first=Nuno |date=2015-09-02 |title=Entre o Reino e o Império. A Carreira Político-Militar de D. Luís de Ataíde, 1516-1581 |trans-title=Between the Kingdom and the Empire. The Political-Military Career of Dom Luís de Ataíde, 1516-1581 |url=https://www.ics.ulisboa.pt/livros/entre-o-reino-e-o-imperio |access-date=2025-09-16 |website=www.ics.ulisboa.pt |publisher=Imprensa de Ciências Sociais |place=Lisboa |at=1242 (Kindle ed.) |language=pt-pt |isbn=978-9726714194 |trans-quote=Under strong pressure from Queen Catherine and Dom António de Ataíde, and against the backdrop of the Ottoman threat to Portuguese Asia, King João III had decided not to send Prince Luís with 40 ships and 8,000 men, instead choosing to appoint as viceroy Dom Garcia de Noronha. Garcia’s choice was justified by his age and experience in warfare on the Asian stage, and the monarch decided to grant him the title of viceroy, believing that this would impress the Ottomans and maybe lead to their withdrawal.}}</ref> |
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On 6 April 1538 he landed in India. During his reign he promoted the settlement of [[missionaries]] on [[Celebes Islands]] and [[Macassar, Western Cape|Macassar]]. He issued a temporary ban on the construction of mainly [[Hindu]] and [[Buddhist]] [[temple]]s within Portuguese India. |
On 6 April 1538 he landed in India. During his reign he promoted the settlement of [[missionaries]] on [[Celebes Islands]] and [[Macassar, Western Cape|Macassar]]. He issued a temporary ban on the construction of mainly [[Hindu]] and [[Buddhist]] [[temple]]s within Portuguese India. |
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Latest revision as of 09:17, 17 September 2025
D. Garcia de Noronha (1479 in Lisbon – 3 April 1540 in Cochin) was a Portuguese nobleman. He was great-great-grandson of King Ferdinand I of Portugal, was the third viceroy and tenth governor of Portuguese India.[1][2]

As far as his life is reconstructed, Garcia de Noronha comes from noble proportions, his father Dom Fernando de Noronha, was a member of the Crown Council of Portugal, as mayor of the palace. As a young nobleman he frequented regularly the royal court. After the death of his father, he became a gentleman of the Board of Manuel I and João III, captain-general of Cartaxo, young nobleman and knight of the royal house.
He served in North Africa and went to India for the first time in 1511 as chief captain of a fleet of six ships. On that voyage, he is reported to have sighted the island of Saint Helena, that his pilots entered onto their charts.[3] This last source claimed that this event was decisive in leading to the utilisation of the island as a regular stopover for rest and replenishment for ships en route from India to Europe. However, this seems doubtful because when Estêvão da Gama arrived at St Helena expedition in 1503 his clerk Thomé Lopes)[4][5][6] identified St Helena’s geographic position with reasonable accuracy when he quoted its distance and direction with respect to locations such as Ascension, Cape Verde, São Tomé and the Cape of Good Hope. The island’s location with respect to Ascension and the Cape of Good Hope was likewise known following the 1505 Portuguese expedition led by Francisco de Almeida.[7]
He was married to Inês de Castro (a sister of D. João de Castro who was later to become the fourth viceroy of Portuguese India); with her he had four children. Moreover, he was a nephew of Afonso de Albuquerque.
He was a successor to the governor-general Nuno da Cunha, nominated by a royal decree of 18 March 1538 as viceroy of Estado da Índia by King John III. The King gave him the title of viceroy, and not just governor-general, in order to impress the Ottoman power that at the time threatened Portuguese possessions in Asia.[8]
On 6 April 1538 he landed in India. During his reign he promoted the settlement of missionaries on Celebes Islands and Macassar. He issued a temporary ban on the construction of mainly Hindu and Buddhist temples within Portuguese India.
Dom Garcia died before the end of his mandate as viceroy on April 3, 1540, in Cochin and is buried in the chancel of the Cathedral of Goa.
In Cascais (São Domingos de Rana) a street is named after him.[9]
- ^ Garcia de Noronha – Lisboa, Portugal, waymarking.com, recovered 21 March 2014
- ^ List of Viceroys and Governors of Portuguese India, recovered 21 March 2014
- ^ Disney, A. R. (2016). The Portuguese in India and other studies, 1500-1700 (XVII – The Portuguese and Saint Helena). Routledge. pp. 217–219. ISBN 978-1-138-49378-0.
- ^ A. H. Schulenburg, ‘The discovery of St Helena: the search continues’. Wirebird: The Journal of the Friends of St Helena, Issue 24 (Spring 2002), pp. 13–19.
- ^ Duarte Leite, História dos Descobrimentos, Vol. II (Lisbon: Edições Cosmos, 1960), 206.
- ^ de Montalbodo, Paesi Nuovamente Retovati & Nuovo Mondo da Alberico Vesputio Fiorentino Intitulato (Venice: 1507)
- ^ The Voyage from Lisbon to India, 1505–06, being an account and journal by Albericus Vespuccius, translated from the contemporary Flemish [by George Frederick Barwick and Janet M. E. Barwick], and edited with prologue and notes by C. H. Coote. [With the text of the original entitled “Die reyse va Lissebone” in facsimile.], Published by B. F. Stevens in 1894.
- ^ Vila-Santa, Nuno (2 September 2015). “Entre o Reino e o Império. A Carreira Político-Militar de D. Luís de Ataíde, 1516-1581” [Between the Kingdom and the Empire. The Political-Military Career of Dom Luís de Ataíde, 1516-1581]. www.ics.ulisboa.pt (in European Portuguese). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. 1242 (Kindle ed.). ISBN 978-9726714194. Retrieved 16 September 2025. [Under strong pressure from Queen Catherine and Dom António de Ataíde, and against the backdrop of the Ottoman threat to Portuguese Asia, King João III had decided not to send Prince Luís with 40 ships and 8,000 men, instead choosing to appoint as viceroy Dom Garcia de Noronha. Garcia’s choice was justified by his age and experience in warfare on the Asian stage, and the monarch decided to grant him the title of viceroy, believing that this would impress the Ottomans and maybe lead to their withdrawal.]
- ^ “Código Postal”. Código Postal (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 14 July 2025.
Código Postal da Rua Dom Garcia de Noronha. Distrito de Lisboa Cascais São Domingos de Rana 2785-585
[Postal Code of Rua Dom Garcia de Noronha, District of Lisbon, Cascais, São Domingos de Rana, 2785-585]



