Before the reign of John III, the Portuguese had already reached
Siam (1511), the
Moluccas (1512), the Chinese littoral (1513),
Canton (1517) and
Timor (1515). During John's rule, the Portuguese reached Japan, and at the end of John's reign,
Macao was offered to Portugal by China.
"From India, he [John III] receives all kinds of spice, drug & stone & many cotton clothes,
taficiras and
alaquecas [kinds of Indian fabrics]. From Malacca, clovetrees, marzipan, sandalwood, camphor, porcelains,
beijoim & calaim [kinds of spices]. From Bengala,
sinafabos, flannel,
chautares, castor beans, &
rebotins that are kinds of thin fabric made of cotton (…). From Alexandria & Cairo, red dyewood, cinnabars, saffron, copper, rosed waters,
borcados [a kind of silk], velvets, taffeta, grains of wood, camlets, gold & silver in bars, & in coins, & carpets. From China, musk, rhubarb, & silk in exchange of gromwells, pearls, horses from Arabia & Persia, non worked silk, silk embroidery threads, fruits of the date palm, raisins, salt, sulphur & many other goods." (Fernão Lopes de Castanheda, História do Descobrimento e Conquista da Índia pelos Portugueses, 1979)