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Admiral of the Ocean Sea

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Christopher ColumbusTemplate:Efn (Template:IPAc-en;<ref>Template:Cite Dictionary.com</ref> between 25 August and 31 October 1451 – 20 May 1506) was an Italian<ref name="Delaney2011">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Efn explorer and navigator from the Republic of Genoa<ref name="Delaney2011" /><ref name="FlintECB2022" /> who completed four Spanish-based voyages across the Atlantic Ocean sponsored by the Catholic Monarchs, opening the way for the widespread European exploration and colonization of the Americas. His expeditions were the first known European contact with the Caribbean and Central and South America.

The name Christopher Columbus is the anglicization of the Latin {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. Growing up on the coast of Liguria, he went to sea at a young age and traveled widely, as far north as the British Isles and as far south as what is now Ghana. He married Portuguese noblewoman Filipa Moniz Perestrelo, who bore a son, Diego, and was based in Lisbon for several years. He later took a Castilian mistress, Beatriz Enríquez de Arana, who bore a son, Ferdinand.<ref name="Fernández-Armesto2010">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Taviani201624">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Sfn

Largely self-educated, Columbus was knowledgeable in geography, astronomy, and history. He developed a plan to seek a western sea passage to the East Indies, hoping to profit from the lucrative spice trade. After the Granada War, and Columbus's persistent lobbying in multiple kingdoms, the Catholic Monarchs, Queen Isabella I and King Ferdinand II, agreed to sponsor a journey west. Columbus left Castile in August 1492 with three ships and made landfall in the Americas on 12 October, ending the period of human habitation in the Americas now referred to as the pre-Columbian era. His landing place was an island in the Bahamas, known by its native inhabitants as Guanahani. He then visited the islands now known as Cuba and Hispaniola, establishing a colony in what is now Haiti. Columbus returned to Castile in early 1493, with captured natives. Word of his voyage soon spread throughout Europe.

Columbus made three further voyages to the Americas, exploring the Lesser Antilles in 1493, Trinidad and the northern coast of South America in 1498, and the east coast of Central America in 1502. Many of the names given to geographical features by Columbus, particularly the names of islands, are still in use. He gave the name {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('Indians') to the indigenous peoples he encountered. The extent to which he was aware that the Americas were a wholly separate landmass is uncertain; he never clearly renounced his belief he had reached the Far East. As a colonial governor, Columbus was accused by some of his contemporaries of significant brutality and removed from the post. Columbus's strained relationship with the Crown of Castile and its colonial administrators in America led to his arrest and removal from Hispaniola in 1500, and later to protracted litigation over the privileges he and his heirs claimed were owed to them by the Crown.

Columbus's expeditions inaugurated a period of exploration, conquest, and colonization that lasted for centuries, thus bringing the Americas into the European sphere of influence. The transfer of plants, animals, precious metals, culture, human populations, technology, diseases, and ideas between the Old World and New World that followed his first voyage are known as the Columbian exchange, named after him. These events and the effects which persist to the present are often cited as the beginning of the modern era.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Mills, Keneth and Taylor, William B., Colonial Spanish America: A Documentary History, p. 36, SR Books, 1998, Template:ISBN</ref> Diseases introduced from the Old World contributed to the depopulation of Hispaniola's indigenous Taíno people, who were also subject to enslavement and other mistreatments by Columbus's government. Increased public awareness of these interactions has led to Columbus being less celebrated in Western culture, which has historically idealized him as a heroic discoverer. Numerous places have been named for him, as has Columbia, a personification commonly used to represent the United States.

Early lifeEdit

Template:Further

File:Casa di Colombo Genova foto 2.jpg
Christopher Columbus House in Genoa, Italy, an 18th-century reconstruction of the house in which Columbus grew up. The original was likely destroyed during the 1684 bombardment of Genoa.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Columbus's early life is obscure, but scholars believe he was born in the Republic of Genoa between 25 August and 31 October 1451.<ref name="Edwards2014">Template:Cite book</ref> His father was Domenico Colombo, a wool weaver who worked in Genoa and Savona, and owned a cheese stand at which young Christopher worked. His mother was Susanna Fontanarossa.Template:Sfn He had three brothers—Bartholomew, Giovanni Pellegrino, and Giacomo (also called Diego)<ref>Template:Cite NIETemplate:Sndthe names Giacomo and Diego are cognates, along with James, all sharing a common origin. See Behind the Name, Mike Campbell, pages Giacomo, Diego, and James. All retrieved 3 February 2017.</ref>—as well as a sister, Bianchinetta.Template:Sfn Bartholomew ran a cartography workshop in Lisbon for at least part of his adulthood.<ref name="King2021">Template:Cite book</ref>

His native language is presumed to have been a Genoese dialect (Ligurian) as his first language, though Columbus probably never wrote in it.Template:Sfn His name in 15th-century Genoese was Cristoffa Corombo,<ref name="Galante2022">Template:Cite book {{#invoke:IPA|main}} Template:Cite book</ref> in Italian, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, and in Spanish {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.<ref name="SánchezGuruléBroughton1990">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Bedini2016">Template:Cite book</ref>

In one of his writings, Columbus says he went to sea at 14.Template:Sfn In 1470, the family moved to Savona, where Domenico took over a tavern. Some modern authors have argued that he was not from Genoa, but from the Aragon region of Spain<ref name="Wilgus1973">Template:Cite book</ref> or from Portugal.<ref>Template:In lang "Armas e Troféus." Revista de História, Heráldica, Genealogia e Arte. 1994, VI serie – Tomo VI, pp. 5–52. Retrieved 21 November 2011.Template:Verify source</ref> These competing hypotheses have been discounted by most scholars.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

File:Castello d'Albertis-DSCF5494.JPG
lang}}, sculpture of young Columbus by Giulio Monteverde, Genoa

In 1473, Columbus began his apprenticeship as business agent for the wealthy Spinola, Centurione, and Di Negro families of Genoa.<ref name="Lyon1992">Template:Cite book</ref> Later, he made a trip to the Greek island Chios in the Aegean Sea, then ruled by Genoa.Template:Sfn In May 1476, he took part in an armed convoy sent by Genoa to carry valuable cargo to northern Europe. He probably visited Bristol, England,<ref name="Vigneras2016">Template:Cite book</ref> and Galway, Ireland,<ref name="UrelandClarkson2011">Template:Cite book</ref> where he may have visited St. Nicholas' Collegiate Church.<ref name="Graves1949">Template:Cite book</ref> It has been speculated he went to Iceland in 1477, though many scholars doubt this.<ref name="Enterline2003">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="PaolucciPaolucci1992">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Kolodny2012" /><ref name=":7">Template:Cite journal</ref> It is known that in the autumn of 1477, he sailed on a Portuguese ship from Galway to Lisbon, where he found his brother Bartholomew, and they continued trading for the Centurione family. Columbus based himself in Lisbon from 1477 to 1485. In 1478, the Centuriones sent Columbus on a sugar-buying trip to Madeira.<ref name="Fernández-Armesto1991">Template:Cite book</ref> He married Felipa Perestrello e Moniz, daughter of Bartolomeu Perestrello, a Portuguese nobleman of Lombard origin,<ref name="FreitasManey1893">Template:Cite book</ref> who had been the donatary captain of Porto Santo.<ref name="Alessandrini2012">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 1479 or 1480, Columbus's son Diego was born. Between 1482 and 1485, Columbus traded along the coasts of West Africa, reaching the Portuguese trading post of Elmina at the Guinea coast in present-day Ghana.<ref name="Suranyi2015">Template:Cite book</ref> Before 1484, Columbus returned to Porto Santo to find that his wife had died.Template:Sfn He returned to Portugal to settle her estate and take Diego with him.<ref name="Taviani2016">Template:Cite book</ref> He left Portugal for Castile in 1485, where he took a mistress in 1487, a 20-year-old orphan named Beatriz Enríquez de Arana.Template:Sfn It is likely that Beatriz met Columbus when he was in Córdoba, a gathering place for Genoese merchants and where the court of the Catholic Monarchs was located at intervals. Beatriz, unmarried at the time, gave birth to Columbus's second son, Fernando Columbus, in July 1488, named for the monarch of Aragon. Columbus recognized the boy as his offspring. Columbus entrusted his older, legitimate son Diego to take care of Beatriz and pay the pension set aside for her following his death, but Diego was negligent in his duties.<ref>Taviani, "Beatriz Arana" in The Christopher Columbus Encyclopedia, vol. 1, pp. 24–25.</ref>

File:ColombusNotesToMarcoPolo.jpg
Columbus's copy of The Travels of Marco Polo, with his handwritten notes in Latin in the margins

Columbus learned Latin, Portuguese, and Castilian. He read widely about astronomy, geography, and history, including the works of Ptolemy, Pierre d'Ailly's {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, the travels of Marco Polo and Sir John Mandeville, Pliny's Natural History, and Pope Pius II's {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. According to historian Edmund Morgan,

Columbus was not a scholarly man. Yet he studied these books, made hundreds of marginal notations in them and came out with ideas about the world that were characteristically simple and strong and sometimes wrong ...<ref name="ESMorgan">Template:Cite news</ref>

Quest for AsiaEdit

BackgroundEdit

File:Atlantic Ocean, Toscanelli, 1474.jpg
Toscanelli's notions of the geography of the Atlantic Ocean (shown superimposed on a modern map), which directly influenced Columbus's plans

Under the Mongol Empire's hegemony over Asia and the Pax Mongolica, Europeans had long enjoyed a safe land passage on the Silk Road to India, parts of East Asia, including China and Maritime Southeast Asia, which were sources of valuable goods. With the fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Empire in 1453, the Silk Road was closed to Christian traders.<ref name="DavidannGilbert2019">Template:Cite book</ref>

In 1474, the Florentine astronomer Paolo dal Pozzo Toscanelli suggested to King Afonso V of Portugal that sailing west across the Atlantic would be a quicker way to reach Asia than the route around Africa, but Afonso rejected his proposal.Template:Sfn<ref name="Boxer1967">Template:Cite book</ref> In the 1480s, Columbus and his brother proposed a plan to reach the East Indies by sailing west. Columbus supposedly wrote to Toscanelli in 1481 and received encouragement, along with a copy of a map the astronomer had sent Afonso implying that a westward route to Asia was possible.Template:Sfn Columbus's plans were complicated by Bartolomeu Dias's rounding of the Cape of Good Hope in 1488, which suggested the Cape Route around Africa to Asia.Template:Sfn

Columbus had to wait until 1492 for King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain to support his voyage across the Atlantic to find gold, spices, a safer route to the East, and converts to Christianity.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Carol Delaney and other commentators have argued that Columbus was a Christian millennialist and apocalypticist and that these beliefs motivated his quest for Asia in a variety of ways. Columbus often wrote about seeking gold in the log books of his voyages and writes about acquiring it "in such quantity that the sovereigns... will undertake and prepare to go conquer the Holy Sepulcher" in a fulfillment of Biblical prophecy.Template:Efn Columbus often wrote about converting all races to Christianity.<ref name="jstor3879352">Template:Cite journal</ref> Abbas Hamandi argues that Columbus was motivated by the hope of "[delivering] Jerusalem from Muslim hands" by "using the resources of newly discovered lands".<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Geographical considerationsEdit

Despite a popular misconception to the contrary, nearly all educated Westerners of Columbus's time knew that the Earth is spherical, a concept that had been understood since antiquity.Template:Sfn The techniques of celestial navigation, which uses the position of the Sun and the stars in the sky, had long been in use by astronomers and were beginning to be implemented by mariners.<ref name="Willoz-Egnor2013">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Smith2002">Template:Cite journal</ref>

However, Columbus made several errors in calculating the size of the Earth, the distance the continent extended to the east, and therefore the distance to the west to reach his goal.

First, as far back as the 3rd century BC, Eratosthenes had correctly computed the circumference of the Earth by using simple geometry and studying the shadows cast by objects at two remote locations.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In the 1st century BC, Posidonius confirmed Eratosthenes's results by comparing stellar observations at two separate locations. These measurements were widely known among scholars, but Ptolemy's use of the smaller, old-fashioned units of distance led Columbus to underestimate the size of the Earth by about a third.<ref name="Freely2013">Template:Cite book</ref>

File:ColombusMap.jpg
"Columbus map", drawn c. 1490 in the Lisbon mapmaking workshop of Bartholomew and Christopher Columbus<ref>"Marco Polo et le Livre des Merveilles", p. 37. Template:ISBN</ref>

Second, three cosmographical parameters determined the bounds of Columbus's enterprise: the distance across the ocean between Europe and Asia, which depended on the extent of the oikumene, i.e., the Eurasian land-mass stretching east–west between Spain and China; the circumference of the Earth; and the number of miles or leagues in a degree of longitude, which was possible to deduce from the theory of the relationship between the size of the surfaces of water and the land as held by the followers of Aristotle in medieval times.<ref name="Randles1990">Template:Cite journal</ref>

From Pierre d'Ailly's {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (1410), Columbus learned of Alfraganus's estimate that a degree of latitude (equal to approximately a degree of longitude along the equator) spanned 56.67 Arabic miles (equivalent to Template:Convert or 76.2 mi), but he did not realize that this was expressed in the Arabic mile (about Template:Convert) rather than the shorter Roman mile (about 1,480 m) with which he was familiar.<ref name="Mahmud2017">Template:Cite journal</ref> Columbus therefore estimated the size of the Earth to be about 75% of Eratosthenes's calculation.<ref name="McCormick2012">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Third, most scholars of the time accepted Ptolemy's estimate that Eurasia spanned 180° longitude,<ref name="Gunn2018">Template:Cite book</ref> rather than the actual 130° (to the Chinese mainland) or 150° (to Japan at the latitude of Spain). Columbus believed an even higher estimate, leaving a smaller percentage for water.<ref name="Zacher2016">Template:Cite book</ref> In d'Ailly's {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, Columbus read Marinus of Tyre's estimate that the longitudinal span of Eurasia was 225° at the latitude of Rhodes.<ref name="Dilke2016">Template:Cite book</ref> Some historians, such as Samuel Eliot Morison, have suggested that he followed the statement in the apocryphal book 2 Esdras (6:42) that "six parts [of the globe] are habitable and the seventh is covered with water."<ref name="Morison1974">Template:Cite book</ref> He was also aware of Marco Polo's claim that Japan (which he called "Cipangu") was some Template:Convert to the east of China ("Cathay"),<ref name="Butel2002">Template:Cite book</ref> and closer to the equator than it is. He was influenced by Toscanelli's idea that there were inhabited islands even farther to the east than Japan, including the mythical Antillia, which he thought might lie not much farther to the west than the Azores,Template:Sfn and the distance westward from the Canary Islands to the Indies as only 68 degrees, equivalent to Template:Convert (a 58% error).<ref name="McCormick2012" />

Based on his sources, Columbus estimated a distance of Template:Convert from the Canary Islands west to Japan; the actual distance is Template:Convert.Template:Sfn<ref name="Edson2007">Template:Cite book</ref> No ship in the 15th century could have carried enough food and fresh water for such a long voyage,<ref name="Taylor2002">Template:Cite book</ref> and the dangers involved in navigating through the uncharted ocean would have been formidable. Most European navigators reasonably concluded that a westward voyage from Europe to Asia was unfeasible. The Catholic Monarchs, however, having completed the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, an expensive war against the Moors in the Iberian Peninsula, were eager to obtain a competitive edge over other European countries in the quest for trade with the Indies. Columbus's project, though far-fetched, held the promise of such an advantage.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

File:Christopher Columbus at the gates of the monastery of Santa Maria de la Rabida with his son Diego (cropped).jpg
Christopher Columbus at the gates of the monastery of Santa María de la Rábida with his son Diego, by Benet Mercadé

Nautical considerationsEdit

Though Columbus was wrong about the number of degrees of longitude that separated Europe from the Far East and about the distance that each degree represented, he did take advantage of the trade winds, which would prove to be the key to his successful navigation of the Atlantic Ocean. He planned to first sail to the Canary Islands before continuing west with the northeast trade wind.<ref name="Gómez2008">Template:Cite book</ref> Part of the return to Spain would require traveling against the wind using an arduous sailing technique called beating, during which progress is made very slowly.Template:Sfn To effectively make the return voyage, Columbus would need to follow the curving trade winds northeastward to the middle latitudes of the North Atlantic, where he would be able to catch the westerlies that blow eastward to the coast of Western Europe.Template:Sfn

The navigational technique for travel in the Atlantic appears to have been exploited first by the Portuguese, who referred to it as the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('turn of the sea'). Through his marriage to his first wife, Felipa Perestrello, Columbus had access to the nautical charts and logs that had belonged to her deceased father, Bartolomeu Perestrello, who had served as a captain in the Portuguese navy under Prince Henry the Navigator. In the mapmaking shop where he worked with his brother Bartholomew, Columbus also had ample opportunity to hear the stories of old seamen about their voyages to the western seas,<ref name="Rickey1992">Template:Cite journal</ref> but his knowledge of the Atlantic wind patterns was still imperfect at the time of his first voyage. By sailing due west from the Canary Islands during hurricane season, skirting the so-called horse latitudes of the mid-Atlantic, he risked being becalmed and running into a tropical cyclone, both of which he avoided by chance.Template:Sfn

Quest for financial support for a voyageEdit

By about 1484, Columbus proposed his planned voyage to King John II of Portugal.<ref name="Rickey1992224">Template:Cite journal</ref> The king submitted Columbus's proposal to his advisors, who rejected it, correctly, on the grounds that Columbus's estimate for a voyage of 2,400 nmi was only a quarter of what it should have been.Template:Sfn In 1488, Columbus again appealed to the court of Portugal, and John II again granted him an audience. That meeting also proved unsuccessful, in part because not long afterwards Bartolomeu Dias returned to Portugal with news of his successful rounding of the southern tip of Africa (near the Cape of Good Hope).<ref name="Pinheiro-Marques2016">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="SymcoxSullivan2016">Template:Cite book</ref>

File:Rabida1.jpg
Monastery of La Rábida, in which Columbus stayed in the years before his first expedition

Columbus sought an audience with the monarchs Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile, who had united several kingdoms in the Iberian Peninsula by marrying and now ruled together. On 1 May 1486, permission having been granted, Columbus presented his plans to Queen Isabella, who in turn referred it to a committee. The learned men of Spain, like their counterparts in Portugal, replied that Columbus had grossly underestimated the distance to Asia. They pronounced the idea impractical and advised the Catholic Monarchs to pass on the proposed venture. To keep Columbus from taking his ideas elsewhere, and perhaps to keep their options open, the sovereigns gave him an allowance, totaling about 14,000 {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} for the year, or about the annual salary of a sailor.Template:Sfn In May 1489, the queen sent him another 10,000 {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, and the same year the monarchs furnished him with a letter ordering all cities and towns under their dominion to provide him food and lodging at no cost.<ref>Durant, Will The Story of Civilization vol. vi, "The Reformation". Chapter XIII, p. 260.</ref>

Columbus also dispatched his brother Bartholomew to the court of Henry VII of England to inquire whether the English Crown might sponsor his expedition, but he was captured by pirates en route, and only arrived in early 1491.Template:Sfn By that time, Columbus had retreated to La Rábida Friary, where the Spanish Crown sent him 20,000 maravedis to buy new clothes and instructions to return to the Spanish court for renewed discussions.Template:Sfn

Agreement with the Spanish CrownEdit

Columbus waited at King Ferdinand's camp until Ferdinand and Isabella conquered Granada, the last Muslim stronghold on the Iberian Peninsula, in January 1492. A council led by Isabella's confessor, Hernando de Talavera, found Columbus's proposal to reach the Indies implausible. Columbus had left for France when Ferdinand intervened,Template:Efn first sending Talavera and Bishop Diego Deza to appeal to the queen.Template:Sfn Isabella was finally convinced by the king's clerk Luis de Santángel, who argued that Columbus would take his ideas elsewhere, and offered to help arrange the funding. Isabella then sent a royal guard to fetch Columbus, who had traveled 2 leagues (over 10 km) toward Córdoba.Template:Sfn

In the April 1492 "Capitulations of Santa Fe", King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella promised Columbus that if he succeeded he would be given the rank of Admiral of the Ocean Sea and appointed Viceroy and Governor of all the new lands he might claim for Spain.<ref name="Lantigua2020">Template:Cite book</ref> He had the right to nominate three persons, from whom the sovereigns would choose one, for any office in the new lands. He would be entitled to one-tenth ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) of all the revenues from the new lands in perpetuity. He also would have the option of buying one-eighth interest in any commercial venture in the new lands, and receive one-eighth ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) of the profits.Template:Sfn<ref name="González-Sánchez2006">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

In 1500, during his third voyage to the Americas, Columbus was arrested and dismissed from his posts. He and his sons, Diego and Fernando, then conducted a lengthy series of court cases against the Castilian Crown, known as the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, alleging that the Crown had illegally reneged on its contractual obligations to Columbus and his heirs.<ref name="Márquez1982">Template:Cite book</ref> The Columbus family had some success in their first litigation, as a judgment of 1511 confirmed Diego's position as viceroy but reduced his powers. Diego resumed litigation in 1512, which lasted until 1536, and further disputes initiated by heirs continued until 1790.<ref name="McDonald2005" />

VoyagesEdit

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File:Flag of Christopher Columbus.svg
Captain's ensign of Columbus's ships
File:Viajes de colon en.svg
The voyages of Christopher Columbus (conjectural)

Between 1492 and 1504, Columbus completed four round-trip voyages between Spain and the Americas, each voyage being sponsored by the Crown of Castile. On his first voyage he reached the Americas, initiating the European exploration and colonization of the continent, as well as the Columbian exchange. His role in history is thus important to the Age of Discovery, Western history, and human history writ large.<ref name="SpechtStockland2017">Template:Cite book</ref>

In Columbus's letter on the first voyage, published following his first return to Spain, he claimed that he had reached Asia,Template:Sfn as previously described by Marco Polo and other Europeans. Over his subsequent voyages, Columbus refused to acknowledge that the lands he visited and claimed for Spain were not part of Asia, in the face of mounting evidence to the contrary.<ref name="Horodowich2017">Template:Cite book</ref> This might explain, in part, why the American continent was named after the Florentine explorer Amerigo Vespucci—who received credit for recognizing it as a "New World"—and not after Columbus.<ref name=umc>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Efn

First voyage (1492–1493)Edit

File:Columbus first voyage.jpg
First voyage (conjectural).Template:Efn Modern place names in black, Columbus's place names in blue

On the evening of 3 August 1492, Columbus departed from Palos de la Frontera with three ships. The largest was a carrack, the Santa María, owned and captained by Juan de la Cosa, and under Columbus's direct command.Template:Sfn The other two were smaller caravels, the Pinta and the Niña,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> piloted by the Pinzón brothers.Template:Sfn Columbus first sailed to the Canary Islands. There he restocked provisions and made repairs then departed from San Sebastián de La Gomera on 6 September,Template:Sfn for what turned out to be a five-week voyage across the ocean.

On 7 October, the crew spotted "[i]mmense flocks of birds".<ref name="Nicholls2009">Template:Cite book</ref> On 11 October, Columbus changed the fleet's course to due west, and sailed through the night, believing land was soon to be found. At around 02:00 the following morning, a lookout on the Pinta, Rodrigo de Triana, spotted land. The captain of the Pinta, Martín Alonso Pinzón, verified the sight of land and alerted Columbus.Template:Sfn<ref>Lopez, (1990, p. 14); Columbus & Toscanelli (2010, p. 35)</ref> Columbus later maintained that he had already seen a light on the land a few hours earlier, thereby claiming for himself the lifetime pension promised by Ferdinand and Isabella to the first person to sight land.Template:Sfn<ref>Lopez, (1990, p. 15)</ref> Columbus called this island (in what is now the Bahamas) {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('Holy Savior'); the Natives called it Guanahani.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Christopher Columbus's journal entry of 12 October 1492 states:

I saw some who had marks of wounds on their bodies and I made signs to them asking what they were; and they showed me how people from other islands nearby came there and tried to take them, and how they defended themselves; and I believed and believe that they come here from {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to take them captive. They should be good and intelligent servants, for I see that they say very quickly everything that is said to them; and I believe they would become Christians very easily, for it seemed to me that they had no religion. Our Lord pleasing, at the time of my departure I will take six of them from here to Your Highnesses in order that they may learn to speak.<ref name="DunnKelly1989">Template:Cite book</ref>

Columbus called the inhabitants of the lands that he visited {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('Indians').<ref name="Hoxie 1996 p.">Template:Cite book</ref> He initially encountered the Lucayan, Taíno, and Arawak peoples.<ref name="Keegan2015">Template:Cite journal</ref> Noting their gold ear ornaments, Columbus took some of the Arawaks prisoner and insisted that they guide him to the source of the gold.<ref name=Zinn>Template:Harvnb</ref> Columbus did not believe he needed to create a fortified outpost, writing, "the people here are simple in war-like matters ... I could conquer the whole of them with fifty men, and govern them as I pleased."<ref>Columbus (1991, p. 87). Or "these people are very simple as regards the use of arms ... for with fifty men they can all be subjugated and made to do what is required of them." (Columbus & Toscanelli, 2010, p. 41)</ref> The Taínos told Columbus that another indigenous tribe, the Caribs, were fierce warriors and cannibals, who made frequent raids on the Taínos, often capturing their women, although this may have been a belief perpetuated by the Spaniards to justify enslaving them.<ref name="Figueredo2008">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Deagan2008">Template:Cite book</ref>

Columbus also explored the northeast coast of Cuba, where he landed on 28 October. On the night of 26 November, Martín Alonso Pinzón took the Pinta on an unauthorized expedition in search of an island called "Babeque" or "Baneque",<ref name="Hunter2012">Template:Cite book</ref> which the natives had told him was rich in gold.<ref name="Magasich-AirolaBeer2007">Template:Cite book</ref> Columbus, for his part, continued to the northern coast of Hispaniola, where he landed on 6 December.<ref name="Anderson-Córdova2017">Template:Cite book</ref> There, the Santa María ran aground on 25 December 1492 and had to be abandoned. The wreck was used as a target for cannon fire to impress the native peoples.Template:Sfn Columbus was received by the native cacique Guacanagari, who gave him permission to leave some of his men behind. Columbus left 39 men, including the interpreter Luis de Torres,Template:SfnTemplate:Efn and founded the settlement of La Navidad, in present-day Haiti.<ref name="DeaganCruxent1993">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Maclean2008">Template:Cite magazine</ref> Columbus took more natives prisoner and continued his exploration.<ref name=Zinn /> He kept sailing along the northern coast of Hispaniola with a single ship until he encountered Pinzón and the Pinta on 6 January.<ref name="Gužauskytė2014">Template:Cite book</ref>

On 13 January 1493, Columbus made his last stop of this voyage in the Americas, in the Bay of Rincón in northeast Hispaniola.<ref>Fuson, Robert. The Log of Christopher Columbus (Camden, International Marine, 1987) 173.</ref> There he encountered the Ciguayos, the only natives who offered violent resistance during this voyage.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The Ciguayos refused to trade the amount of bows and arrows that Columbus desired; in the ensuing clash one Ciguayo was stabbed in the buttocks and another wounded with an arrow in his chest.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Because of these events, Columbus called the inlet the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('Bay of Arrows').<ref name="DunnKelly1989341">Template:Cite book</ref>

Columbus headed for Spain on the Niña, but a storm separated him from the Pinta, and forced the Niña to stop at the island of Santa Maria in the Azores. Half of his crew went ashore to say prayers of thanksgiving in a chapel for having survived the storm. But while praying, they were imprisoned by the governor of the island, ostensibly on suspicion of being pirates. After a two-day stand-off, the prisoners were released, and Columbus again set sail for Spain.<ref name="Catz1990">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Another storm forced Columbus into the port at Lisbon.Template:Sfn From there he went to {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} north of Lisbon to meet King John II of Portugal, who told Columbus that he believed the voyage to be in violation of the 1479 Treaty of Alcáçovas. After spending more than a week in Portugal, Columbus set sail for Spain. Returning to Palos on 15 March 1493, he was given a hero's welcome and soon afterward received by Isabella and Ferdinand in Barcelona.<ref name="Kamen2014">Template:Cite book</ref> To them he presented kidnapped Taínos and various plants and items he had collected.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp

One of the ten Natives taken on the return trip was a Lucayan Taíno from Guanahani thought to be 13–15 years of age, who Columbus adopted as his son upon their arrival in Spain; the boy, whose Lucayan name is unknown, received the name Diego at baptism. Initially, Diego had been recognized for his intelligence and rapid acquisition of Spanish customs, and would serve as a guide and interpreter on each of Columbus's subsequent voyages. By the second voyage's departure later in 1493, Diego was the only Native out of the ten taken to Europe who had not died or become seriously ill as the result of disease; while on this voyage, he played a vital role in the discovery of La Navidad. He subsequently married and had a son, also named Diego, who died of illness in 1506. Following Columbus's death, Diego spent the rest of his life confined to Santo Domingo, and does not reappear in the historical record following a smallpox epidemic that swept Hispaniola in 1519.Template:Sfnm

Columbus's letter on the first voyage, probably dispatched to the Spanish court upon arrival in Lisbon, was instrumental in spreading the news throughout Europe about his voyage. Almost immediately after his arrival in Spain, printed versions began to appear, and word of his voyage spread rapidly.<ref name="Ife1992">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Most people initially believed that he had reached Asia.Template:Sfn The Bulls of Donation, three papal bulls of Pope Alexander VI delivered in 1493, purported to grant overseas territories to Portugal and the Catholic Monarchs of Spain. They were replaced by the Treaty of Tordesillas of 1494.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The two earliest published copies of Columbus's letter on the first voyage aboard the Niña were donated in 2017 by the Jay I. Kislak Foundation to the University of Miami library in Coral Gables, Florida, where they are housed.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Second voyage (1493–1496)Edit

On 24 September 1493, Columbus sailed from Cádiz with 17 ships, and supplies to establish permanent colonies in the Americas. He sailed with nearly 1,500 men, including sailors, soldiers, priests, carpenters, stonemasons, metalworkers, and farmers. Among the expedition members were Alvarez Chanca, a physician who wrote a detailed account of the second voyage; Juan Ponce de León, the first governor of Puerto Rico and Florida; the father of Bartolomé de las Casas; Juan de la Cosa, a cartographer who is credited with making the first world map depicting the New World; and Columbus's youngest brother Diego.<ref name="DeaganCruxent2008">Template:Cite book</ref> The fleet stopped at the Canary Islands to take on more supplies, and set sail again on 7 October, deliberately taking a more southerly course than on the first voyage.<ref name="Bedini2016705">Template:Cite book</ref>

On 3 November, they arrived in the Windward Islands; the first island they encountered was named Dominica by Columbus, but not finding a good harbor there, they anchored off a nearby smaller island, which he named {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, now a part of Guadeloupe and called Marie-Galante. Other islands named by Columbus on this voyage were Montserrat, Antigua, Saint Martin, the Virgin Islands, as well as many others.<ref name="Bedini2016705" />

On 17 November, Columbus first sighted the eastern coast of the island of Puerto Rico, known to its native Taino people as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. His fleet sailed along the island's southern coast for a whole day, before making landfall on its northwestern coast at the Bay of Añasco, early on 19 November. Upon landing, Columbus christened the island San Juan Bautista after John the Baptist, and remained anchored there for two days from 20 to 21 November, filling the water casks of the ships in his fleet.<ref name="Monson1986">Template:Cite book</ref>

On 22 November, Columbus returned to Hispaniola to visit La Navidad in modern-day Haiti, where 39 Spaniards had been left during the first voyage. Columbus found the fort in ruins. He learned from Guacanagaríx, the local tribe leader, that his men had quarreled over gold and taken women from the tribe, and that after some left for the territory of Caonabo, Caonabo came and burned the fort and killed the rest of the men there.Template:Sfn<ref name="DeaganCruxent1993" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Las Casas, Bartolomé, Las Casas on Columbus: Background and the 2nd and 4th Voyages (consisting of a section of History of the Indies by Las Casas, and commentary), Translated and Edited by Nigel Griffen, Brepols Publishers, Turnhout, Belgium, 1999 (original work: 1535), pp. 96–97</ref>

Columbus then established a poorly located and short-lived settlement to the east, La Isabela,<ref name="DeaganCruxent2008" /> in the present-day Dominican Republic.<ref>"Teeth Of Columbus's Crew Flesh Out Tale Of New World Discovery". ScienceDaily. 20 March 2009.</ref> By the end of 1494, disease and famine had killed two-thirds of the Spanish settlers there.<ref name="Austin-Alchon2003">Template:Cite book</ref>

From April to August 1494, Columbus explored Cuba and Jamaica, then returned to Hispaniola.<ref>Las Casas, Las Casas on Columbus, Background and the 2nd and 4th Voyages, pp. 118–130</ref> Before leaving on this exploration to Cuba, Columbus had ordered a large number of men, under Pedro Margarit, to "journey the length and breadth of the island, enforcing Spanish control and bringing all the people under the Spanish yoke."<ref>Las Casas, Las Casas on Columbus, Background and the 2nd and 4th Voyages, pp. 117–118</ref> These men, in his absence, raped women, took men captive to be servants, and stole from the indigenous people. A number of Spanish were killed in retaliation. By the time Columbus returned from exploring Cuba, the four primary leaders of the Arawak people in Hispaniola were gathering for war to try to drive the Spanish from the Island. Columbus assembled a large number of troops, and joined with his one native ally, chief [Guacanagarix], met for battle. The Spanish, even though they were largely outnumbered, won this battle, and over the next 9 months Columbus continued to wage war on the native Taíno on Hispaniola until they surrendered and agreed to pay tribute.<ref>Las Casas, Las Casas on Columbus, Background and the 2nd and 4th Voyages, pp. 130–134, 137–138, 147–149</ref>

Columbus implemented {{#invoke:Lang|lang}},<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Lyle N. McAlister (1984). Spain and Portugal in the New World, 1492–1700. University of Minnesota Press. p. 164. Template:ISBN.</ref> a Spanish labor system that rewarded conquerors with the labor of conquered non-Christian people. It is also recorded that punishments to both Spaniards and natives included whippings and mutilation (cutting noses and ears).<ref>De Cuneo, Michele. "Michel de Cuneo's Letter on the Second Voyage, 28 October 1495." Journal and other Documents in the Life of Christopher Columbus. Edited and Translated by Samuel Eliot Morison. New York: The Heritage Press, 1963. p. 215</ref><ref>Cólon, Ferdinand. The Life of The Admiral Christopher Columbus by His Son Ferdinand. Edited and translated by Benjamin Keen. New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1959 (Originally published 1571), p. 129</ref>

Columbus and the colonists enslaved many of the indigenous people,Template:Sfn including children.<ref>Olson, Julius E. and Edward G. Bourne (editors). "The Northmen, Columbus and Cabot, 985–1503", in The Voyages of the Northmen; The Voyages of Columbus and of John Cabot. (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1906), pp. 369–383.</ref> Natives were beaten, raped, and tortured for the location of imagined gold.<ref name="Stannard1993">Template:Cite book</ref> Thousands committed suicide rather than face the oppression.<ref>Koning, Hans. Columbus, His Enterprise: Exploding the Myth. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1976: 83–83.</ref>Template:Efn

In February 1495, Columbus rounded up about 1,500 Arawaks, some of whom had rebelled, in a great slave raid. About 500 of the strongest were shipped to Spain as slaves,Template:Sfn with about two hundred of those dying en route.<ref name="Zinn" /><ref name="CohenPenman2017">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In June 1495, the Spanish Crown sent ships and supplies to Hispaniola. In October, Florentine merchant Gianotto Berardi, who had won the contract to provision the fleet of Columbus's second voyage and to supply the colony on Hispaniola, received almost 40,000 {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} worth of enslaved Indians. He renewed his effort to get supplies to Columbus, and was working to organize a fleet when he suddenly died in December.<ref name="Felipe2007">Template:Cite book</ref> On 10 March 1496, having been away about 30 months,Template:Sfn the fleet departed La Isabela. On 8 June the crew sighted land somewhere between Lisbon and Cape St. Vincent, and disembarked in Cádiz on 11 June.<ref name="Cook 1998">Template:Cite book</ref>

Third voyage (1498–1500)Edit

On 30 May 1498, Columbus left with six ships from Sanlúcar, Spain. The fleet called at Madeira and the Canary Islands, where it divided in two, with three ships heading for Hispaniola and the other three vessels, commanded by Columbus, sailing south to the Cape Verde Islands and then westward across the Atlantic. It is probable that this expedition was intended at least partly to confirm rumors of a large continent south of the Caribbean Sea, that is, South America.<ref name="Saunders2005">Template:Cite book</ref>

On 31 July they sighted Trinidad,<ref name="Flint2017">Template:Cite book</ref> the most southerly of the Caribbean islands. On 5 August, Columbus sent several small boats ashore on the southern side of the Paria Peninsula in what is now Venezuela,<ref name="Allen1997">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Sfn near the mouth of the Orinoco river.<ref name="Saunders2005" /> This was the first recorded landing of Europeans on the mainland of South America,<ref name="Allen1997" /> which Columbus realized must be a continent.<ref name="Zeruvabel2003">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Cervantes2021">Template:Cite book</ref> The fleet then sailed to the islands of Chacachacare and Margarita, reaching the latter on 14 August,Template:Sfn and sighted Tobago and Grenada from afar, according to some scholars.<ref name="MorisonObregón1964">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Allen1997" />

On 19 August, Columbus returned to Hispaniola. There he found settlers in rebellion against his rule, and his unfulfilled promises of riches. Columbus had some of the Europeans tried for their disobedience; at least one rebel leader was hanged.Template:Sfn

In October 1499, Columbus sent two ships to Spain, asking the Court of Spain to appoint a royal commissioner to help him govern.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> By this time, accusations of tyranny and incompetence on the part of Columbus had also reached the Court. The sovereigns sent Francisco de Bobadilla, a relative of Marquesa Beatriz de Bobadilla, a patron of Columbus and a close friend of Queen Isabella,<ref name="Hofman1994">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Sfn to investigate the accusations of brutality made against the Admiral. Arriving in Santo Domingo while Columbus was away, Bobadilla was immediately met with complaints about all three Columbus brothers.Template:Sfn He moved into Columbus's house and seized his property, took depositions from the Admiral's enemies, and declared himself governor.<ref name="Allen1997" />

Bobadilla reported to Spain that Columbus once punished a man found guilty of stealing corn by having his ears and nose cut off and then selling him into slavery. He claimed that Columbus regularly used torture and mutilation to govern Hispaniola.Template:Efn Testimony recorded in the report stated that Columbus congratulated his brother Bartholomew on "defending the family" when the latter ordered for a woman to be paraded naked through the streets and then had her tongue cut because she had "spoken ill of the admiral and his brothers".Template:Sfn The document also describes how Columbus put down native unrest and revolt: he first ordered a brutal suppression of the uprising in which many natives were killed, and then paraded their dismembered bodies through the streets in an attempt to discourage further rebellion.<ref name="A&E">Template:Cite AV media</ref> Columbus vehemently denied the charges.<ref name=":2" /><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The neutrality and accuracy of the accusations and investigations of Bobadilla toward Columbus and his brothers have been disputed by historians, given the anti-Italian sentiment of the Spaniards and Bobadilla's desire to take over Columbus's position.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="nas.org">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Cervantes202146">Template:Cite book</ref>

In early October 1500, Columbus and Diego presented themselves to Bobadilla, and were put in chains aboard La Gorda, the caravel on which Bobadilla had arrived at Santo Domingo.Template:Sfn<ref name="Gužauskytė2014179">Template:Cite book</ref> They were returned to Spain, and languished in jail for six weeks before King Ferdinand ordered their release. Not long after, the king and queen summoned the Columbus brothers to the Alhambra palace in Granada. The sovereigns expressed indignation at the actions of Bobadilla, who was then recalled and ordered to make restitutions of the property he had confiscated from Columbus.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite book</ref> The royal couple heard the brothers' pleas; restored their freedom and wealth; and, after much persuasion, agreed to fund Columbus's fourth voyage.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> However, Nicolás de Ovando was to replace Bobadilla and be the new governor of the West Indies.<ref name=":3">Noble, David Cook. "Nicolás de Ovando" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, vol. 4, p. 254. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.</ref>

New light was shed on the seizure of Columbus and his brother Bartholomew, the Adelantado, with the discovery by archivist Isabel Aguirre of an incomplete copy of the testimonies against them gathered by Francisco de Bobadilla at Santo Domingo in 1500. She found a manuscript copy of this {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (inquiry) ‌in the Archive of Simancas, Spain, uncatalogued until she and Consuelo Varela published their book, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (The fall of Christopher Colón: the judgement of Bobadilla) in 2006.<ref name="Leon2012">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="VarelaAguirre2006">Template:Cite book</ref>

Fourth voyage (1502–1504)Edit

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File:Columbus fourth voyage.jpg
Columbus's fourth voyage

On 9 May 1502,Template:Refn Columbus left Cádiz with his flagship Santa María and three other vessels. The ships were crewed by 140 men, including his brother Bartholomew as second in command and his son Fernando.<ref name="Sauer2008">Template:Cite book</ref> He sailed to Asilah on the Moroccan coast to rescue Portuguese soldiers said to be besieged by the Moors. The siege had been lifted by the time they arrived, so the Spaniards stayed only a day and continued on to the Canary Islands.<ref name="Cook199846">Template:Cite book</ref>

On 15 June, the fleet arrived at Martinique, where it lingered for several days. A hurricane was forming, so Columbus continued westward,<ref name="Sauer2008" /> hoping to find shelter on Hispaniola. He arrived at Santo Domingo on 29 June, but was denied port, and the new governor Francisco de Bobadilla refused to listen to his warning that a hurricane was approaching. Instead, while Columbus's ships sheltered at the mouth of the Rio Jaina, the first Spanish treasure fleet sailed into the hurricane. Columbus's ships survived with only minor damage, while 20 of the 30 ships in the governor's fleet were lost along with 500 lives (including that of Francisco de Bobadilla). Although a few surviving ships managed to straggle back to Santo Domingo, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, the fragile ship carrying Columbus's personal belongings and his 4,000 pesos in gold was the sole vessel to reach Spain.Template:Sfn<ref name="Gužauskytė2014185">Template:Cite book</ref> The gold was his tenth ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) of the profits from Hispaniola, equal to 240,000 maravedis,<ref name="Bedini2016200">Template:Cite book</ref> guaranteed by the Catholic Monarchs in 1492.<ref name="Armas1985">Template:Cite book</ref>

After a brief stop at Jamaica, Columbus sailed to Central America, arriving at the coast of Honduras on 30 July. Here Bartholomew found native merchants and a large canoe. On 14 August, Columbus landed on the continental mainland at Punta Caxinas, now Puerto Castilla, Honduras.<ref name="Colindres1975">Template:Cite book</ref> He spent two months exploring the coasts of Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica, seeking a strait in the western Caribbean through which he could sail to the Indian Ocean. Sailing south along the Nicaraguan coast, he found a channel that led into Almirante Bay in Panama on 5 October.<ref name="Calvo2004">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Bedini2016720">Template:Cite book</ref>

As soon as his ships anchored in Almirante Bay, Columbus encountered Ngäbe people in canoes who were wearing gold ornaments.<ref name="StirlingStirling1964">Template:Cite book</ref> In January 1503, he established a garrison at the mouth of the Belén River. Columbus left for Hispaniola on 16 April. On 10 May he sighted the Cayman Islands, naming them {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} after the numerous sea turtles there.Template:Sfn His ships sustained damage in a storm off the coast of Cuba. Unable to travel farther, on 25 June 1503 they were beached in Saint Ann Parish, Jamaica.Template:Sfn

For six months Columbus and 230 of his men remained stranded on Jamaica. Diego Méndez de Segura, who had shipped out as a personal secretary to Columbus, and a Spanish shipmate called Bartolomé Flisco, along with six natives, paddled a canoe to get help from Hispaniola.<ref name="Roorda2020">Template:Cite book</ref> The governor, Nicolás de Ovando y Cáceres, detested Columbus and obstructed all efforts to rescue him and his men.<ref name="Vigneras1978">Template:Cite journal</ref> In the meantime Columbus, in a desperate effort to induce the natives to continue provisioning him and his hungry men, won their favor by predicting a lunar eclipse for 29 February 1504, using Abraham Zacuto's astronomical charts.<ref name="Hakin2002">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Clayton J., Drees, The Late Medieval Age of Crisis and Renewal: 1300–1500 a Biographical Dictionary, 2001, p. 511</ref><ref name="Kadir1992">Template:Cite book</ref> Despite the governor's obstruction, Christopher Columbus and his men were rescued on 28 June 1504, and arrived in Sanlúcar, Spain, on 7 November.<ref name="Vigneras1978" />

Later life, illness, and deathEdit

File:The death of Columbus.jpg
The death of Columbus, lithograph by L. Prang & Co., 1893

Columbus had always claimed that the conversion of non-believers was one reason for his explorations, and he grew increasingly religious in his later years.<ref name="RiveraPagán1992">Template:Cite book</ref> Probably with the assistance of his son Diego and his friend the Carthusian monk Gaspar Gorricio, Columbus produced two books during his later years: a Book of Privileges (1502), detailing and documenting the rewards from the Spanish Crown to which he believed he and his heirs were entitled, and a Book of Prophecies (1505), in which passages from the Bible were used to place his achievements as an explorer in the context of Christian eschatology.<ref name="Watts1985">Template:Cite journal</ref>

In his later years, Columbus demanded that the Crown of Castile give him his tenth of all the riches and trade goods yielded by the new lands, as stipulated in the Capitulations of Santa Fe.<ref name="González-Sánchez2006" /> Because he had been relieved of his duties as governor, the Crown did not feel bound by that contract and his demands were rejected. After his death, his heirs sued the Crown for a part of the profits from trade with America, as well as other rewards. This led to a protracted series of legal disputes known as the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('Columbian lawsuits').<ref name="McDonald2005">Template:Cite book</ref>

File:IL CONSOLE USA IN VISITA ALL’UNIVERSITÀ DI PAVIA (28250236188).jpg
The remains of Christopher Columbus preserved in the University Library of Pavia

During a violent storm on his first return voyage, Columbus, then 41, had suffered an attack of what was believed at the time to be gout. In subsequent years, he was plagued with what was thought to be influenza and other fevers, bleeding from the eyes, temporary blindness and prolonged attacks of gout. The attacks increased in duration and severity, sometimes leaving Columbus bedridden for months at a time, and culminated in his death 14 years later.

Based on Columbus's lifestyle and the described symptoms, some modern commentators suspect that he suffered from reactive arthritis, rather than gout.<ref name=UMD /><ref name=Hoenig>Template:Cite journal</ref> Reactive arthritis is a joint inflammation caused by intestinal bacterial infections or after acquiring certain sexually transmitted diseases (primarily chlamydia or gonorrhea). In 2006, Frank C. Arnett, a medical doctor, and historian Charles Merrill, published their paper in The American Journal of the Medical Sciences proposing that Columbus had a form of reactive arthritis; Merrill made the case in that same paper that Columbus was the son of Catalans and his mother possibly a member of a prominent {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (converted Jew) family.<ref name="ArnettMerrill2006">Template:Cite journal</ref> "It seems likely that [Columbus] acquired reactive arthritis from food poisoning on one of his ocean voyages because of poor sanitation and improper food preparation", says Arnett, a rheumatologist and professor of internal medicine, pathology and laboratory medicine at the University of Texas Medical School at Houston.<ref name=UMD>Template:Cite press release</ref>

Some historians such as H. Micheal Tarver and Emily Slape,<ref name="TarverSlape2016">Template:Cite book</ref> as well as medical doctors such as Arnett and Antonio Rodríguez Cuartero,<ref name="ElUniversal2007">Template:Cite news</ref> believe that Columbus had such a form of reactive arthritis, but according to other authorities, this is "speculative",<ref name="ScottGalloway2015">Template:Cite book</ref> or "very speculative".<ref name="RitchlinFitzGerald2007">Template:Cite book</ref>

After his arrival to Sanlúcar from his fourth voyage (and Queen Isabella's death), an ill Columbus settled in Seville in April 1505. He stubbornly continued to make pleas to the Crown to defend his own personal privileges and his family's.Template:Sfn He moved to Segovia (where the court was at the time) on a mule by early 1506,<ref name="Kadir1992193">Template:Cite book</ref> and, on the occasion of the wedding of King Ferdinand with Germaine of Foix in Valladolid, Spain, in March 1506, Columbus moved to that city to persist with his demands.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> On 20 May 1506, aged 54, Columbus died in Valladolid.Template:Sfn

Location of remainsEdit

Template:Multiple image Columbus's remains were first buried at the Chapel of Wonders at the Convent of St. Francis, Valladolid,Template:Sfn but were then moved to the monastery of La Cartuja in Seville (southern Spain) by the will of his son Diego.<ref name="Nash2005">Template:Cite book</ref> They may have been exhumed in 1513 and interred at the Seville Cathedral. In about 1536, the remains of both Columbus and his son Diego were moved to a cathedral in Colonial Santo Domingo, in the present-day Dominican Republic; Columbus had requested to be buried on the island.<ref name="Guardian2003" /> By some accounts, in 1793, when France took over the entire island of Hispaniola, Columbus's remains were moved to Havana, Cuba.<ref name="ElPaís2021">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Captain George Farquar of Lord Stanley brought the news to Liverpool in 1796 that while he had been at Havana, the Spanish ship of the line Template:Ship had arrived there carrying the "coffin, bones and fetters of Christopher Columbus" from San Domingo to be re-interred at Havana with "the highest military honours."</ref> After Cuba became independent following the Spanish–American War in 1898, at least some of these remains were moved back to the Seville Cathedral,Template:Sfn<ref name="DNA" /> where they were placed on an elaborate catafalque.

In June 2003, DNA samples were taken from the remains in Seville, as well as those of Columbus's brother Diego and younger son Fernando.<ref name="Guardian2003">Template:Cite news</ref> Initial observations suggested that the bones did not appear to match Columbus's physique or age at death.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> DNA extraction proved difficult; only short fragments of mitochondrial DNA could be isolated. These matched corresponding DNA from Columbus's brother, supporting that the two men had the same mother.<ref name="DNA">Template:Cite news</ref> Such evidence, together with anthropologic and historic analyses, led the researchers to conclude that the remains belonged to Christopher Columbus.<ref name="ÁlvarezMartinez2010">Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Efn

In 1877, a priest discovered a lead box at Santo Domingo inscribed: "Discoverer of America, First Admiral". Inscriptions found the next year read "Last of the remains of the first admiral, Sire Christopher Columbus, discoverer."Template:Sfn The box contained bones of an arm and a leg, as well as a bullet.Template:Efn These remains were considered legitimate by physician and U.S. Assistant Secretary of State John Eugene Osborne, who suggested in 1913 that they travel through the Panama Canal as a part of its opening ceremony.<ref name="EveStar">Template:Cite news</ref>Template:Efn These remains were kept at the Basilica Cathedral of Santa María la Menor (in the Colonial City of Santo Domingo) before being moved to the Columbus Lighthouse (Santo Domingo Este, inaugurated in 1992). The authorities in Santo Domingo have never allowed these remains to be DNA-tested, so it is unconfirmed whether they are from Columbus's body as well.<ref name="DNA" /><ref name="ÁlvarezMartinez2010" />Template:Efn

CommemorationEdit

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File:1893 Nina Pinta Santa Maria replicas.jpg
Replicas of the Niña, Pinta and Santa María sailed from Spain to the Chicago Columbian Exposition in 1893

The figure of Columbus was not ignored in the British colonies during the colonial era: Columbus became a unifying symbol early in the history of the colonies that became the United States when Puritan preachers began to use his life story as a model for a "developing American spirit".<ref name="West1992">Template:Cite journal</ref> In the spring of 1692, Puritan preacher Cotton Mather described Columbus's voyage as one of three shaping events of the modern age, connecting Columbus's voyage and the Puritans' migration to North America, seeing them together as the key to a grand design.<ref name="Bercovitch2014">Template:Cite book</ref>

The use of Columbus as a founding figure of New World nations spread rapidly after the American Revolution. This was out of a desire to develop a national history and founding myth with fewer ties to Britain.<ref name="Bushman1992">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Bartosik-Vélez20142">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Burmila20171009">Template:Cite news</ref> His name was the basis for the female national personification of the United States, Columbia,<ref name="Dewey2007">Template:Cite book</ref> in use since the 1730s with reference to the original Thirteen Colonies, and also a historical name applied to the Americas and to the New World. Columbia, South Carolina and Columbia Rediviva, the ship for which the Columbia River was named, are named for Columbus.<ref name="Benke2011">Template:Cite book</ref>

Columbus's name was given to the newly born Republic of Colombia in the early 19th century, inspired by the political project of "Colombeia" developed by revolutionary Francisco de Miranda, which was put at the service of the emancipation of continental Hispanic America.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

To commemorate the 400th anniversary of the landing of Columbus,<ref name="WDL">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago was named the World's Columbian Exposition.<ref name="BolotinLaing2002">Template:Cite book</ref> The U.S. Postal Service issued the first U.S. commemorative stamps, the Columbian Issue,<ref name="Handler2016">Template:Cite journal</ref> depicting Columbus, Queen Isabella and others in various stages of his several voyages.<ref name="West2014">Template:Cite book</ref> A commemorative silver half dollar was also struck, which remains the only U.S. currency issued having a foreigner as its subject. The policies related to the celebration of the Spanish colonial empire as the vehicle of a nationalist project undertaken in Spain during the Restoration in the late 19th century took form with the commemoration of the 4th centenary on 12 October 1892 (in which the figure of Columbus was extolled by the Conservative government), eventually becoming the very same national day.Template:Sfn Several monuments commemorating the "discovery" were erected in cities such as Palos, Barcelona, Granada, Madrid, Salamanca, Valladolid and Seville in the years around the 400th anniversary.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Efn

For the Columbus Quincentenary in 1992, a second Columbian issue was released jointly with Italy, Portugal, and Spain.<ref>"Columbian Exposition Souvenir Sheets", Arago: people, postage & the post, National Postal Museum online, viewed 18 April 2014.</ref> Columbus was celebrated at Seville Expo '92, and Genoa Expo '92.

The Boal Mansion Museum, founded in 1951, contains a collection of materials concerning later descendants of Columbus and collateral branches of the family. It features a 16th-century chapel from a Spanish castle reputedly owned by Diego Colón which became the residence of Columbus's descendants. The chapel interior was dismantled and moved from Spain in 1909 and re-erected on the Boal estate at Boalsburg, Pennsylvania. Inside it are numerous religious paintings and other objects including a reliquary with fragments of wood supposedly from the True Cross. The museum also holds a collection of documents mostly relating to Columbus descendants of the late 18th and early 19th centuries.<ref name="Bedini2016489">Template:Cite book</ref>

In many countries of the Americas, as well as Spain and Italy, Columbus Day celebrates the anniversary of Columbus's arrival in the Americas on 12 October 1492.<ref>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref>

LegacyEdit

The voyages of Columbus are considered a turning point in human history,<ref name="BelloShaver2011">Template:Cite book</ref> marking the beginning of globalization and accompanying demographic, commercial, economic, social, and political changes.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

File:Landing of Columbus (2) (cropped).jpg
Landing of Columbus at the Island of Guanahaní, West Indies (1846), by John Vanderlyn. The landing of Columbus became a powerful icon of American genesis in the 19th century.

His explorations resulted in permanent contact between the two hemispheres, and the term "pre-Columbian" is used to refer to the cultures of the Americas before the arrival of Columbus and his European successors.<ref name="McFarlane2004">Template:Cite book</ref> The ensuing Columbian exchange saw the massive exchange of animals, plants, fungi, diseases, technologies, mineral wealth and ideas.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>

In the first century after his endeavors, Columbus's figure largely languished in the backwaters of history, and his reputation was beset by his failures as a colonial administrator. His legacy was somewhat rescued from oblivion when he began to appear as a character in Italian and Spanish plays and poems from the late 16th century onward.<ref name="noble">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Columbus was subsumed into the Western narrative of colonization and empire building, which invoked notions of translatio imperii and translatio studii to underline who was considered "civilized" and who was not.<ref name="Bartosik-Vélez2014">Template:Cite book</ref>

File:Discovery-statue (cropped).JPG
The Discovery of America sculpture, depicting Columbus and a cowering Indian maiden, stood outside the U.S. Capitol from 1844 to 1958.

The Americanization of the figure of Columbus began in the latter decades of the 18th century, after the revolutionary period of the United States,<ref name="Heike2014">Template:Cite book</ref> elevating the status of his reputation to a national myth, homo americanus.Template:Sfn His landing became a powerful icon as an "image of American genesis".<ref name="Heike2014" /> The Discovery of America sculpture, depicting Columbus and a cowering Native maiden, was commissioned on 3 April 1837, when U.S. President Martin Van Buren sanctioned the engineering of Luigi Persico's design. This representation of Columbus's triumph and the Native's recoil is a demonstration of supposed white superiority over savage, naive Natives.<ref name="Fryd2001">Template:Cite book</ref> As recorded during its unveiling in 1844, the sculpture extends to "represent the meeting of the two races", as Persico captures their first interaction, highlighting the "moral and intellectual inferiority" of Natives.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Placed outside the U.S. Capitol building where it remained until its removal in the mid-20th century, the sculpture reflected the contemporary view of whites in the U.S. toward the Natives; they are labeled "merciless Indian savages" in the United States Declaration of Independence.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In 1836, Pennsylvania senator and future U.S. President James Buchanan, who proposed the sculpture, described it as representing "the great discoverer when he first bounded with ecstasy upon the shore, ail his toils past, presenting a hemisphere to the astonished world, with the name America inscribed upon it. Whilst he is thus standing upon the shore, a female savage, with awe and wonder depicted in her countenance, is gazing upon him."<ref>Congressional Globe, 28 April 1836, p. 1316.</ref>

The American Columbus myth was reconfigured later in the century when he was enlisted as an ethnic hero by immigrants to the United States who were not of Anglo-Saxon stock, such as Jewish, Italian, and Irish people, who claimed Columbus as a sort of ethnic founding father.Template:Sfn<ref name="Dennis2018">Template:Cite book</ref> Catholics unsuccessfully tried to promote him for canonization in the 19th century.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

From the 1990s onward, a narrative of Columbus being responsible for the genocide of indigenous peoples and environmental destruction began to compete with the then predominant discourse of Columbus as Christ-bearer, scientist, or father of America.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> This narrative features the negative effects of Columbus' conquests on native populations.<ref name="Stannard1993" /> Exposed to Old World diseases, the indigenous populations of the New World collapsed,<ref name="Axtell1992">Template:Cite journal</ref> and were largely replaced by Europeans and Africans,<ref name="Houbert2003">Template:Cite book</ref> who brought with them new methods of farming, business, governance, and religious worship.

Originality of discovery of AmericaEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

File:Faroe stamps 225-226 Discovery of America.jpg
Discovery of America, a postage stamp from the Faroe Islands commemorates the voyages of discovery of Leif Erikson (Template:Circa) and Christopher Columbus (1492).

Though Christopher Columbus came to be considered the European discoverer of America in Western popular culture, his historical legacy is more nuanced.<ref name="Phillips2000">Template:Cite book</ref> After settling Iceland, the Norse settled the uninhabited southern part of Greenland beginning in the 10th century.<ref name="Nedkvitne2018">Template:Cite book</ref> Norsemen are believed to have then set sail from Greenland and Iceland to become the first known Europeans to reach the North American mainland, nearly 500 years before Columbus reached the Caribbean.<ref name=":6">Template:Cite magazine</ref> The 1960s discovery of a Norse settlement dating c. 1000 at L'Anse aux Meadows, Newfoundland, partially corroborates accounts within the Icelandic sagas of Erik the Red's colonization of Greenland and his son Leif Erikson's subsequent exploration of a place he called Vinland.<ref name=":1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In the 19th century, amid a revival of interest in Norse culture, Carl Christian Rafn and Benjamin Franklin DeCosta wrote works establishing that the Norse had preceded Columbus in colonizing the Americas.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="EB1911">Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "De Costa, Benjamin Franklin". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 915.</ref> Following this, in 1874 Rasmus Bjørn Anderson argued that Columbus must have known of the North American continent before he started his voyage of discovery.<ref name="Kolodny2012">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":6" /> Most modern scholars doubt Columbus had knowledge of the Norse settlements in America, with his arrival to the continent being most likely an independent discovery.<ref name="Enterline2003" /><ref name="PaolucciPaolucci1992" /><ref name="Kolodny2012" /><ref name=":7" /><ref name="Restall2021">Template:Cite book</ref>

Europeans devised explanations for the origins of the Native Americans and their geographical distribution with narratives that often served to reinforce their own preconceptions built on ancient intellectual foundations.<ref name="Berkhofer1979">Template:Cite book</ref> In modern Latin America, the non-Native populations of some countries often demonstrate an ambiguous attitude toward the perspectives of indigenous peoples regarding the so-called "discovery" by Columbus and the era of colonialism that followed.<ref name="Coronil1989">Template:Cite journal</ref> In his 1960 monograph, Mexican philosopher and historian Edmundo O'Gorman explicitly rejects the Columbus discovery myth, arguing that the idea that Columbus discovered America was a misleading legend fixed in the public mind through the works of American author Washington Irving during the 19th century. O'Gorman argues that to assert Columbus "discovered America" is to shape the facts concerning the events of 1492 to make them conform to an interpretation that arose many years later.<ref name="Nuccetelli2020">Template:Cite book</ref> For him, the Eurocentric view of the discovery of America sustains systems of domination in ways that favor Europeans.<ref name="Lazo2013">Template:Cite journal</ref> In a 1992 article for The UNESCO Courier, Félix Fernández-Shaw argues that the word "discovery" prioritizes European explorers as the "heroes" of the contact between the Old and New World. He suggests that the word "encounter" is more appropriate, being a more universal term which includes Native Americans in the narrative.<ref name="Fernández-Shaw1992">Template:Cite journal</ref>

America as a distinct landEdit

Historians have traditionally argued that Columbus remained convinced until his death that his journeys had been along the east coast of Asia as he originally intended<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Burmila20171009" /> (excluding arguments such as Anderson's).<ref name="Kolodny2012" /> On his third voyage he briefly referred to South America as a "hitherto unknown" continent,Template:Efn while also rationalizing that it was the Earthly Paradise (Eden) located "at the end of the Orient".<ref name="Zeruvabel2003" /> Columbus continued to claim in his later writings that he had reached Asia; in a 1502 letter to Pope Alexander VI, he asserts that Cuba is the east coast of Asia.Template:Sfn On the other hand, in a document in the Book of Privileges (1502), Columbus refers to the New World as the Indias Occidentales ('West Indies'), which he says "were unknown to all the world".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Shape of the EarthEdit

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File:Faro colon.jpg
Columbus Lighthouse, a Museum and Mausoleum in homage to Christopher Columbus in Santo Domingo

Washington Irving's 1828 biography of Columbus popularized the idea that Columbus had difficulty obtaining support for his plan because many Catholic theologians insisted that the Earth was flat,<ref name="book3">Template:Cite book</ref> but this is a popular misconception which can be traced back to 17th-century Protestants campaigning against Catholicism.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In fact, the spherical shape of the Earth had been known to scholars since antiquity, and was common knowledge among sailors, including Columbus.Template:Sfn Coincidentally, the oldest surviving globe of the Earth, the Erdapfel, was made in 1492, just before Columbus's return to Europe from his first voyage. As such it contains no sign of the Americas and yet demonstrates the common belief in a spherical Earth.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

In 1492, Columbus correctly measured Polaris's diurnal motion around true north as having a diameter of almost 7°.Template:Sfn In 1498, while sailing west through the doldrums 8° north in July and again in August sailing the trade winds 13° north, Columbus reported seeing Polaris with a diurnal motion of 10° in diameter. He accounted for the shift by concluding that Earth's figure is pear-shaped, with the 'stalk' portion (comparing this to a woman's breast) being nearest Heaven and upon which was centered the Earthly Paradise.<ref name="Randles2011">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Sfn<ref name="Willingham2015">Template:Cite book</ref> Although Columbus's later readings were incorrect, 20th-century satellite data happens to indicate that the Earth has a slight pear shape.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>O'Keefe, J. A., Eckeis, A., and Squires, R. K. (1959). "Vanguard Measurements Give Pear-Shaped Component of Earth's Figure". Science, 129 (3348), 565–566. {{#invoke:doi|main}}.</ref><ref>Template:Cite report</ref>

Criticism and defenseEdit

Columbus has been criticized both for his brutality and for initiating the depopulation of the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean, whether by imported diseases or intentional violence. According to scholars of Native American history, George Tinker and Mark Freedman, Columbus was responsible for creating a cycle of "murder, violence, and slavery" to maximize exploitation of the Caribbean islands' resources, and that Native deaths on the scale at which they occurred would not have been caused by new diseases alone. Further, they describe the proposition that disease and not genocide caused these deaths as "American holocaust denial".<ref name="TinkerFreeland2008">Template:Cite journal</ref> Historian Kris Lane disputes whether it is appropriate to use the term "genocide" when the atrocities were not Columbus's intent, but resulted from his decrees, family business goals, and negligence.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite news</ref> Other scholars defend Columbus's actions or allege that the worst accusations against him are not based in fact while others claim that "he has been blamed for events far beyond his own reach or knowledge".<ref name=":5">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

As a result of the protests and riots that followed the murder of George Floyd in 2020, many public monuments of Christopher Columbus have been removed.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

BrutalityEdit

File:Pedestal base of Christopher Columbus statue 2.jpeg
The remains of the pedestal base of the Columbus statue in the Baltimore inner harbor area. The statue was thrown into the harbor on 4 July 2020, as part of the George Floyd protests.

Some historians have criticized Columbus for initiating the widespread colonization of the Americas and for abusing its native population.<ref>Template:Cite journal.</ref><ref name="Zinn" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> On St. Croix, Columbus's friend Michele da Cuneo—according to his own account—kept an indigenous woman he captured, whom Columbus "gave to [him]", then brutally raped her.Template:SfnTemplate:EfnTemplate:Efn

According to some historians, the punishment for an indigenous person, aged 14 and older, failing to pay a hawk's bell, or cascabela,<ref name="DeaganCruxent2002">Template:Cite book</ref> worth of gold dust every six months (based on Bartolomé de las Casas's account) was cutting off the hands of those without tokens, often leaving them to bleed to death.<ref name="TinkerFreeland2008" /><ref name="Zinn" /><ref name="Koning">Template:Cite book</ref> Other historians dispute such accounts. For example, a study of Spanish archival sources showed that the cascabela quotas were imposed by Guarionex, not Columbus, and that there is no mention, in the primary sources, of punishment by cutting off hands for failing to pay.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Columbus had an economic interest in the enslavement of the Hispaniola natives and for that reason was not eager to baptize them, which attracted criticism from some churchmen.<ref name="varela">Template:Cite book</ref> Consuelo Varela, a Spanish historian, stated that "Columbus's government was characterized by a form of tyranny. Even those who loved him had to admit the atrocities that had taken place."<ref name="newspaper1">Template:Cite news</ref> Other historians have argued that some of the accounts of the brutality of Columbus and his brothers have been exaggerated as part of the Black Legend, a historical tendency towards anti-Spanish and anti-Catholic sentiment in historical sources dating as far back as the 16th century, which they speculate may continue to taint scholarship into the present day.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

According to historian Emily Berquist Soule, the immense Portuguese profits from the maritime trade in African slaves along the West African coast served as an inspiration for Columbus to create a counterpart of this apparatus in the New World using indigenous American slaves.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Historian William J. Connell has argued that while Columbus "brought the entrepreneurial form of slavery to the New World", this "was a phenomenon of the times", further arguing that "we have to be very careful about applying 20th-century understandings of morality to the morality of the 15th century."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In a less popular defense of colonization, Spanish ambassador Template:Ill has argued, "Normally we melded with the cultures in America, we stayed there, we spread our language and culture and religion."Template:Sfn

British historian Basil Davidson has dubbed Columbus the "father of the slave trade",<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> citing the fact that the first license to ship enslaved Africans to the Caribbean was issued by the Catholic Monarchs in 1501 to the first royal governor of Hispaniola, Nicolás de Ovando.<ref name="Jennings2020">Template:Cite book</ref>

DepopulationEdit

Template:Further Template:See also Around the turn of the 21st century, estimates for the Template:Nowrap population of Hispaniola ranged between 250,000 and two million,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref name=Keegan>Keegan, William F., "Destruction of the Taino" in Archaeology. January/February 1992, pp. 51–56.</ref>Template:Efn but genetic analysis published in late 2020 suggests that smaller figures are more likely, perhaps as low as 10,000–50,000 for Hispaniola and Puerto Rico combined.<ref name="Fernandes">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Based on the previous figures of a few hundred thousand, some have estimated that a third or more of the natives in Haiti were dead within the first two years of Columbus's governorship.<ref name="Zinn" />Template:Sfn Contributors to depopulation included disease, warfare, and harsh enslavement.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Indirect evidence suggests that some serious illness may have arrived with the 1,500 colonists who accompanied Columbus' second expedition in 1493.Template:Sfn Charles C. Mann writes that "It was as if the suffering these diseases had caused in Eurasia over the past millennia were concentrated into the span of decades."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> A third of the natives forced to work in gold and silver mines died every six months.<ref name="Hickel">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":4" /> Within three to six decades, the surviving Arawak population numbered only in the hundreds.<ref name="Hickel" />Template:Sfn<ref>Crosby (1972) p. 45.</ref> The indigenous population of the Americas overall is thought to have been reduced by about 90% in the century after Columbus's arrival.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Among indigenous peoples, Columbus is often viewed as a key agent of genocide.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Samuel Eliot Morison, a Harvard University historian and author of a multivolume biography on Columbus, writes, "The cruel policy initiated by Columbus and pursued by his successors resulted in complete genocide."<ref name="Morison">Template:Cite book</ref>

According to Noble David Cook, "There were too few Spaniards to have killed the millions who were reported to have died in the first century after Old and New World contact." He instead estimates that the death toll was caused by smallpox,<ref name="Cook1998">Template:Cite book</ref> which may have caused a pandemic only after the arrival of Hernán Cortés in 1519.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> According to some estimates, smallpox had an 80–90% fatality rate in Native American populations.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The natives had no acquired immunity to these new diseases and suffered high fatalities. There is also evidence that they had poor diets and were overworked.<ref name="Austin-Alchon2003" /><ref>Crosby (1972) pp. 39, 47</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Historian Andrés Reséndez of University of California, Davis, says the available evidence suggests "slavery has emerged as major killer" of the indigenous populations of the Caribbean between 1492 and 1550 more so than diseases such as smallpox, influenza and malaria.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He says that indigenous populations did not experience a rebound like European populations did following the Black Death because unlike the latter, a large portion of the former were subjected to deadly forced labor in the mines.<ref name=":4">Template:Cite news</ref>

The diseases that devastated the Native Americans came in multiple waves at different times, sometimes as much as centuries apart, which would mean that survivors of one disease may have been killed by others, preventing the population from recovering.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Historian David Stannard describes the depopulation of the indigenous Americans as "neither inadvertent nor inevitable", saying it was the result of both disease and intentional genocide.<ref name="Stannard1993xii">Template:Cite book</ref>

Navigational expertiseEdit

Biographers and historians have a wide range of opinions about Columbus's expertise and experience navigating and captaining ships. One scholar lists some European works ranging from the 1890s to 1980s that support Columbus's experience and skill as among the best in Genoa, while listing some American works over a similar timeframe that portray the explorer as an untrained entrepreneur, having only minor crew or passenger experience prior to his noted journeys.<ref name="Peck">Template:Cite journal</ref> According to Morison, Columbus's success in utilizing the trade winds might owe significantly to luck.Template:Sfn

Physical appearanceEdit

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Contemporary descriptions of Columbus, including those by his son Fernando and Bartolomé de las Casas, describe him as taller than average, with light skin (often sunburnt), blue or hazel eyes, high cheekbones and freckled face, an aquiline nose, and blond to reddish hair and beard (until about the age of 30, when it began to whiten).Template:Sfn<ref>Bartolomé de Las Casas, Historia de las Indias, ed. Agustín Millares Carlo, 3 vols. (Mexico City, 1951), book 1, chapter 2, 1:29.</ref> One Spanish commentator described his eyes using the word garzos, now usually translated as "light blue", but it seems to have indicated light grey-green or hazel eyes to Columbus's contemporaries. The word rubios can mean "blond", "fair", or "ruddy".Template:Sfn Although an abundance of artwork depicts Columbus, no authentic contemporary portrait is known.<ref name="Wilson1991">Template:Cite book</ref>

A well-known image of Columbus is a portrait by Sebastiano del Piombo, which has been reproduced in many textbooks. It agrees with descriptions of Columbus in that it shows a large man with auburn hair, but the painting dates from 1519 so cannot have been painted from life. Furthermore, the inscription identifying the subject as Columbus was probably added later, and the face shown differs from that of other images.<ref name="Met-Piombo">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Sometime between 1531 and 1536, Alejo Fernández painted an altarpiece, The Virgin of the Navigators, that includes a depiction of Columbus.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The painting was commissioned for a chapel in Seville's Casa de Contratación (House of Trade) in the Alcázar of Seville and remains there.<ref name="Phillips2018">Template:Cite journal</ref>

At the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893, 71 alleged portraits of Columbus were displayed; most of them did not match contemporary descriptions.Template:Sfn

See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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