João de Castro (born Feb. 7, 1500, Lisbon, Port.—died June 6, 1548, Goa, Portuguese India) was a naval officer who helped preserve the Portuguese commercial settlement in India and contributed to the science of navigation with three roteiros (pilot books). He was also the first to note the deviation of the ship’s compass needle created by the magnetic effect of iron objects.
The son of Alvaro de Castro, governor of Lisbon, and a student of the celebrated Portuguese mathematician and geographer Pedro Nunes, he spent 20 years in North Africa before sailing to western India in 1538. There he helped to end the Ottoman-Indian siege of the Portuguese fort at Diu. He sailed up the Red Sea to Suez (1540–41) and returned to Portugal in 1543. In 1545 he commanded the Portuguese fleet that helped end another siege of Diu. He served as viceroy of Portuguese India for only a few months before his death in the arms of the missionary St. Francis Xavier. Castro’s pilot books, remarkable for their scientific observations, were published in Paris, France (1833), and in Oporto (1843) and Lisbon, Port. (1882).