The early history of the Seychelles is…
1504 CE to 1515 CE
The early history of the Seychelles is unknown.
Malays from Borneo, who eventually settled on Madagascar, perhaps lingered here circa 200 -300 CE.
Arab navigators, on trading voyages across the Indian Ocean, were probably aware of the islands, although they did not settle them.
A manuscript dated CE 851, written by an Arab merchant, refers to the Maldives and higher islands beyond them, possibly the Seychelles.
Arabs had been trading the highly valued Lodoicea fruit, or coco de mer nuts, found only in Seychelles, long before European discovery of the islands.
The rotted-out nuts can float and are found washed ashore in the Maldives and Indonesia.
In 1503, Vasco da Gama, crossing from India to East Africa, had sighted islands and named them Amirantes after himself (islands of the Admiral).
The granitic islands, first charted in 1505 begin to appear on Portuguese charts as the Seven Sisters.