On a March morning in 1503 C.E., a Portuguese scrivener named Thomé Lopes looked out from the deck of one of Vasco da Gama’s India Armada ships and noted something remarkable in his log: an elevated island rising from the Indian Ocean. It was almost certainly Silhouette Island — rugged, volcanic, unmistakably present. With that notation, the Seychelles entered the written record of European exploration for the first time.
What the evidence shows
- Vasco da Gama Seychelles: On 15 March 1503 C.E., da Gama’s fleet, crossing from India to East Africa, sighted what was almost certainly Silhouette Island, followed the next day by Desroches Island — the first recorded European sightings of the archipelago.
- Arab trade networks: Arab navigators were already well acquainted with the islands long before 1503 C.E., trading the rare coco de mer nuts found only in Seychelles across the Indian Ocean to the Maldives and Indonesia.
- Earliest possible visitors: Austronesians from Borneo, who eventually settled Madagascar, may have lingered in or near the Seychelles around 200–300 C.E., though no permanent settlement has been confirmed.
A moment in a much longer story
The word “discovery” has a complicated history. When da Gama’s fleet noted those islands in 1503 C.E., the Seychelles were not unknown to the world — only to Europe.
Arab traders had been crossing the western Indian Ocean for centuries, and the coco de mer, a massive double-hulled nut found exclusively in Seychelles, was already a prized commodity reaching as far as the Maldives and coastal Indonesia. The nuts floated free when they decayed, washing ashore across the ocean as living evidence that something extraordinary lay to the west. Arab navigators followed those clues.
What da Gama’s fleet contributed was documentation that entered the cartographic record of a rising maritime power. The granitic islands began to appear on Portuguese charts as the “Seven Sisters.” That act of naming and mapping had consequences — for trade, for imperial competition, and eventually for the islands themselves.
Who da Gama was, and what the armada was doing
Vasco da Gama had already made history by 1498 C.E., becoming the first European to reach India by sea around the Cape of Good Hope. His 1503 C.E. voyage was his second to India, commanding the fourth Portuguese India Armada. The fleet was crossing from the Indian subcontinent back toward East Africa when Thomé Lopes recorded the sighting.
It was, in the context of the voyage, almost incidental — a notation in a ship’s log, not a landing, not a claim of sovereignty. No one came ashore. The islands remained uninhabited by any permanent population until 1770 C.E., when the first colonial settlers arrived aboard the Thélemaque: 15 white colonists, eight Africans, and five Indians. That founding population would eventually give rise to the Seychellois Creole language and culture.
Lasting impact
The 1503 C.E. sighting set in motion a slow-moving chain of European interest in the archipelago. Portugal charted the islands. France eventually claimed them in 1756 C.E., naming the largest island Mahé and the group the Iles de Séchelles in honor of a French finance minister. Britain took possession in 1794 C.E. and made Seychelles a permanent colony in 1811 C.E.
The islands’ isolation, which had kept them pristine and uninhabited for so long, became both their gift and their burden. That isolation preserved extraordinary biodiversity — including the coco de mer palm, found nowhere else on Earth, and giant tortoise populations that drew the attention of the earliest European visitors. The Vallée de Mai Nature Reserve, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, protects the last wild coco de mer forest today.
Seychelles gained independence in 1976 C.E. and has since built one of the most ambitious marine conservation programs in the world. The country has protected nearly 30% of its ocean territory under a landmark debt-for-nature swap — a model now studied by island nations worldwide. The same waters da Gama crossed in 1503 C.E. are now among the most actively protected in the Indian Ocean.
The Seychellois Creole language that emerged from the islands’ diverse founding populations — European, African, and South Asian — is spoken by the vast majority of the country’s roughly 100,000 people today. It is a living reminder that the islands’ story was never just a European one.
Blindspots and limits
The historical record of the Seychelles before European contact is thin to the point of near-absence. Scholars acknowledge that Arab navigators were probably aware of the islands, but no written Arabic account of the Seychelles from that era has been definitively identified. The possible Austronesian presence around 200–300 C.E. rests on inference and circumstantial evidence, not confirmed archaeological finds on the islands themselves.
Calling 1503 C.E. a “discovery” also papers over what came next. The same European cartographic project that documented the islands enabled their eventual colonization, the forced transport of enslaved Africans to work them, and the near-collapse of their tortoise populations. The full arc of Seychelles history includes that reckoning alongside the wonder of the islands themselves.
The islands today
Modern Seychelles is a small island republic of 115 islands scattered across 1.3 million square kilometers of the Indian Ocean. It remains one of the most biodiverse places on Earth, home to endemic species found nowhere else. Scientists and conservationists now work alongside Seychellois communities to protect what the earliest sailors could only describe as a land of plenty.
That description — a land of plenty — first entered the written record because a fleet navigator looked up from his charts in March 1503 C.E. and wrote down what he saw. The moment was small. Its consequences were not.
For more on the environmental work being done in Seychelles today, the Seychelles News Agency provides ongoing coverage of conservation and cultural developments across the archipelago.
Read more
For more on this story, see: History of Seychelles — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Indigenous land rights recognition reaches 160 million hectares ahead of COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Seychelles
About this article
- 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
- 🌍 It aims to be inspirational but clear-eyed, accurate, and evidence-based, and grounded in care for the Earth, peace and belonging for all, and human evolution.
- 💬 Leave your notes and suggestions in the comments below — I will do my best to review and implement where appropriate.
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