The Other Exile: The Story of Fernao Lopes, St Helena and a Paradise Lost by Abdul Rahman Azzam
The first known inhabitant of St Helena - long before
Napoleon - was a 16th-century Portuguese renegade.
In 1506 Fernao Lopes, a member of his country's minor nobility,
travelled to Goa in search of honour and wealth. There he converted to Islam,
married a Muslim, fought his former countrymen, and was eventually captured -
his nose and hands publicly cut off for treachery. Eventually sailing for home,
he jumped ship at St. Helena, becoming the island's first inhabitant, with only
a black cockerel for company.
News of Lopes reached the King of Portugal. Picked up by a ship sent
especially for him, Lopes so impressed the King, and the Pope in Rome, that he
was granted one wish. He requested his return to St Helena.
Based on brand new research by A R Azzam, author of the acclaimed Saladin (Longman,
2007), The Other Exile is at once a historical
adventure story and a meditation on solitude. It is a story about redemption in
one of the darkest periods in Europe and the tale of the haunting relationship
between man and wild nature.