Diogo do Couto

Diogo do Couto
Born c. 1542
Lisbon, Kingdom of Portugal
Died 1616
Goa, Portuguese India
Nationality Portuguese
Occupation Historian

Diogo do Couto (Lisbon, c. 1542 – Goa, 10 December 1616) was a Portuguese historian.

Biography

He was born in Lisbon in 1542 (son of Gaspar do Couto and Isabel Serrão Calvos) and studied Latin and Rhetoric at Saint Antão College and philosophy at the convent at Benfica.[1]

In March 1559 (Armada of Pero Vaz de Sequeira) he traveled to Portuguese India. As a soldier he took part in the Surat campaign in March 1560, living in Baroche in 1563.

He returned to Lisbon with D. António de Noronha in 1569.

He was a close friend of the poet Luís de Camões, and described him in Ilha de Moçambique in 1569, as indebted and unable to fund his return to Portugal. Couto and other friends took it upon themselves to help Camões, who was thus enabled to take his most significant work, the Lusiads, to the capital.

Couto arrived in Lisbon on board the Santa Clara in April 1570, only to discover that the port was closed due to plague. Upon receiving permission from the King of Portugal (who he met in Almeirim), the ship docked in Tejo.

Shortly after Couto returned to India in the Armada of D. António de Noronha; married a Luisa de Melo in Goa, and worked in a supply warehouse.

In 1595 (shortly after completing the first DECADA) Couto was invited to organize the Goa archive (being appointed "Guarda-Mor do Tombo da India"), and to continue writing the DECADAS (of João de Barros).

In his lifetime the 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th DECADAS were published. After Couto died, his other works were in the hands of his brother-in-law, the priest Deodato da Trindade.

Works

References

  1. Couto, Diogo do; Caminha, Antonio Lourenço (1808). Obras ineditas de Diogo do Couto [New works by Diogo do Couto] (in Portuguese). Imperial e Real.
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