Valera gathers a fleet of three Basque…
1476 CE
Valera gathers a fleet of three Basque ships and nine Andalusian caravels (twenty-five caravels according to Palencia), all heavily armed.
There is no longer any possibility of intercepting the Portuguese fleet, so he decides, after stopping at Porto Santo Island, to head towards the island of António Noli in the Cape Verde archipelago, near the coast of Guinea.
They plunder the island and capture António Noli, who at this time holds the territory feudally from the King of Portugal.
They next set sail for the coast of Africa, where they capture two caravels owned by the Marquis of Cadiz containing a shipment of five hundred enslaved Africans.
The sailors from Palos separate themselves from the expedition at this point.
They are the most knowledgeable in the maritime navigation of Guinea, so Valera returns to Andalusia.
This expedition obtains few economic benefits, as a significant portion of the enslaved Africans are returned to the Marquis of Cadiz, and because Valera is forced to indemnify the Duke of Medina Sidonia for the damages caused on the Island of Noli, which the Duke claims as his.