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On October 12, 1492, Christopher Columbus set
foot on the fine white sands of an island in the Bahamas, unfurled the
Spanish royal standard and claimed the territory for King Ferdinand and
Queen Isabella. Although Columbus thought he was in Asia, he had
actually landed in the “New World.” History—for better and worse—would
never be the same again. Here are 10 things you may not know about the
famed explorer.
1. Columbus didn’t set out to prove the earth was round.
Forget those myths perpetuated by everyone from Washington Irving to
Bugs Bunny. There was no need for Columbus to debunk the
flat-earthers—the ancient Greeks had already done so. As early as the
sixth century B.C., the Greek mathematician Pythagoras surmised the
world was round, and two centuries later Aristotle backed him up with
astronomical observations. By 1492 most educated people knew the planet
was not shaped like a pancake.
2. Columbus was likely not the first European to cross the Atlantic Ocean.
That distinction is generally given to the Norse Viking Leif Eriksson,
who is believed to have landed in present-day Newfoundland around 1000
A.D., almost five centuries before Columbus set sail. Some historians
even claim that Ireland’s Saint Brendan or other Celtic people crossed
the Atlantic before Eriksson. While the United States commemorates
Columbus—even though he never set foot on the North American
mainland—with parades and a federal holiday, Leif Eriksson Day on
October 9 receives little fanfare.
3. Three countries refused to back Columbus’ voyage.
For nearly a decade, Columbus lobbied European monarchies to bankroll
his quest to discover a western sea route to Asia. In Portugal, England
and France, the response was the same: no. The experts told Columbus his
calculations were wrong and that the voyage would take much longer than
he thought. Royal advisors in Spain raised similar concerns to King
Ferdinand and Queen Isabella. Turns out the naysayers were right.
Columbus dramatically underestimated the earth’s circumference and the
size of the oceans. Luckily for him, he ran into the uncharted Americas.
4. Nina and Pinta were not the actual names of two of Columbus’ three ships.
In 15th-century Spain, ships were traditionally named after saints.
Salty sailors, however, bestowed less-than-sacred nicknames upon their
vessels. Mariners dubbed one of the three ships on Columbus’s 1492
voyage the Pinta, Spanish for “the painted one” or “prostitute.” The
Santa Clara, meanwhile, was nicknamed the Nina in honor of its owner,
Juan Nino. Although the Santa Maria is called by its official name, its
nickname was La Gallega, after the province of Galicia in which it was
built.
5. The Santa Maria wrecked on Columbus’ historic voyage.
On Christmas Eve of 1492, a cabin boy ran Columbus’s flagship into a
coral reef on the northern coast of Hispaniola, near present-day Cap
Haitien, Haiti. Its crew spent a very un-merry Christmas salvaging the
Santa Maria’s cargo. Columbus returned to Spain aboard the Nina, but he
had to leave nearly 40 crewmembers behind to start the first European
settlement in the Americas—La Navidad. When Columbus returned to the
settlement in the fall of 1493, none of the crew were found alive.
6. Columbus made four voyages to the New World.
Although best known for his historic 1492 expedition, Columbus returned
to the Americas three more times in the following decade. His voyages
took him to Caribbean islands, South America and Central America.
7. Columbus returned to Spain in chains in 1500.
Columbus’s governance of Hispaniola could be brutal and tyrannical.
Native islanders who didn’t collect enough gold could have their hands
cut off, and rebel Spanish colonists were executed at the gallows.
Colonists complained to the monarchy about mismanagement, and a royal
commissioner dispatched to Hispaniola arrested Columbus in August 1500
and brought him back to Spain in chains. Although Columbus was stripped
of his governorship, King Ferdinand not only granted the explorer his
freedom but subsidized a fourth voyage.
8. A lunar eclipse may have saved Columbus.
In February 1504, a desperate Columbus was stranded in Jamaica,
abandoned by half his crew and denied food by the islanders. The heavens
that he relied on for navigation, however, would guide him safely once
again. Knowing from his almanac that a lunar eclipse was coming on
February 29, 1504, Columbus warned the islanders that his god was upset
with their refusal of food and that the moon would “rise inflamed with
wrath” as an expression of divine displeasure. On the appointed night,
the eclipse darkened the moon and turned it red, and the terrified
islanders offered provisions and beseeched Columbus to ask his god for
mercy.
9. Even in death, Columbus continued to cross the Atlantic.
Following his death in 1506, Columbus was buried in Valladolid, Spain,
and then moved to Seville. At the request of his daughter-in-law, the
bodies of Columbus and his son Diego were shipped across the Atlantic to
Hispaniola and interred in a Santo Domingo cathedral. When the French
captured the island in 1795, the Spanish dug up remains thought to be
those of the explorer and moved them to Cuba before returning them to
Seville after the Spanish-American War in 1898. However, a box with
human remains and the explorer’s name was discovered inside the Santo
Domingo cathedral in 1877. Did the Spaniards exhume the wrong body? DNA
testing in 2006 found evidence that at least some of the remains in
Seville are those of Columbus. The Dominican Republic has refused to let
the other remains be tested. It could be possible that, aptly, pieces
of Columbus are both in the New World and the Old World.
10. Heirs of Columbus and the Spanish monarchy were in litigation until 1790.
After the death of Columbus, his heirs waged a lengthy legal battle with
the Spanish crown, claiming that the monarchy short-changed them on
money and profits due the explorer. Most of the Columbian lawsuits were
settled by 1536, but the legal proceedings nearly dragged on until the
300th anniversary of Columbus’ famous voyage.
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