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John Newbery to Mr Richard Hakluyt of Oxford, Author of the Voyages, &c. No. 2,--Letter from Mr John Newbery to Mr Leonard Poore of London. 3.--Letter from Mr John Newbery to the same. 4.--Letter from John Newbery to Messrs John Eldred and William Scales at Basora. 5.--Letter from Mr John Newbery to Messrs Eldred and Scales. 6.--Letter from Mr Newbery to Mr Leonard Poore. 7.--Letter from Mr Ralph Fitch to Mr Leonard Poore. 8.--The Report of John Huighen, &c. A GENERAL HISTORY AND COLLECTION OF VOYAGES AND TRAVELS. * * * * * PART II. BOOK III. CONTINUED. * * * * * CONTINUATION OF THE DISCOVERIES AND CONQUESTS OF THE PORTUGUESE IN THE EAST; TOGETHER WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF THE EARLY VOYAGES Of OTHER EUROPEAN NATIONS TO INDIA. * * * * * CHAPTER IV. CONTINUED. CONTINUATION OF THE PORTUGUESE TRANSACTIONS IN INDIA, AFTER THE RETURN OF DON STEPHANO DE GAMA FROM SUEZ IN 1541, TO THE REDUCTION OF PORTUGAL UNDER THE DOMINION OF SPAIN IN 1581. SECTION XIII. _Account of an Expedition of the Portuguese from India to Madagascar in 1613._ Being anxious to find out a considerable number of Portuguese who were reported to exist in the island of St. Lawrence or Madagascar, having been cast away at different times on that island, and also desirous of propagating the ever blessed gospel among its inhabitants, and to exclude the Hollanders from that island by establishing a friendly correspondence with the native princes, the viceroy Don Jerome de Azevedo sent thither, in 1613, a caravel from Goa commanded by Paul Rodrigues de Costa, accompanied by two Jesuits, some interpreters, and a competent number of soldiers. This island is about 260 leagues in length and 600 in circumference[1], its greatest extent being from N.N.E. to S.S.W. It is 80 leagues from E. to W. where widest, but considerably less towards the north, where it ends in a point named St Ignatius which is about 15 leagues from east to west[2]. It may be considered as divided into three parts. The first or northern portion is divided from the other two by an imaginary line from east to west at Cape St Andrew[3]. The other two divisions are formed by a chain of mountains running nearly south from this line to Cape St Romanus, otherwise Cape St Mary, but much nearer the east coast than the west. The island is divided into a great number o
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