Celebrating Columbus
Christopher Columbus, the most famous explorer in history, was once a celebrated hero. Now, many consider him a villain, a despoiler of paradise. So which version of Columbus is true? Michael Knowles answers this question and offers some much-needed historical perspective.
Nowadays, Christopher Columbus is widely considered to be ___________________.
a despoiler of paradisean enslavera genocidal maniacall of the aboveWhere was Christopher Columbus born?
Lisbon, PortugalGenoa, ItalyMadrid, SpainManchester, EnglandBy the time he turned 30, Columbus had sailed to Iceland, Ireland, and Africa.
TrueFalseFor how long did Columbus solicit King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella to sponsor his voyage to seek out the Americas before they finally agreed?
8 months18 months8 years18 yearsOn the voyage to the Americas, Columbus and his crew were at sea for __________ before spotting land.
2 weeks4 weeks6 weeks10 weeks
- The legacy of Christopher Columbus is complicated, but one thing is indisputable: his voyages changed the world.
Christopher Columbus was born in 1451 in the port city of Genoa, Italy. At a time when birth often determined destiny, his origins were entirely unremarkable. His father was a middle-class wool weaver who expected his son to follow the same path, but Columbus heard the call of the Age of Discovery. By the time he turned 30, Columbus had sailed to Iceland, Ireland, and Africa.
View sourceColumbus eventually grew obsessed with finding a westward sea route from Europe to India. After his expedition request was turned down by the king of Portugal, Columbus took his plans to Spain’s King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, who initially turned him down as well. After eight years of repeated requests to back his expedition, the royal couple relented, granting Columbus three small ships: the Niña, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria, on which he set out in 1492.
View sourceOnce the ships left the Canary Islands, they were on their own. By the third week, Columbus’ crews had lost their nerve. By sheer force of will, the explorer kept his men in line. Finally, after 10 long weeks at sea, on the night of October 11, 1492, Columbus spotted land. What he called San Salvador we know today as the Bahamas.
View sourceUpon his return to Spain, word of the Italian explorer’s successful voyage quickly spread throughout Europe. A New World had been discovered, and the Old World would never be the same.
View source- Columbus’ encounters with native tribes has been the subject of great controversy and criticism.
In the Bahamas, Columbus and his men encountered the Taino tribe. The first encounter between Europe and the Americas went well. The Taino were curious and helpful, while Columbus was emphatic that his crew treat them with kindness and respect.
View sourceBut Columbus also viewed the Taino as potential “servants” to Westerners. “They were very well built, with very handsome bodies and very good faces,” he wrote in his diary. “They do not carry arms or know them....They should be good servants.”
View sourceAlong with the peaceful Taino, the islands were also inhabited by the Caribs, a tribe of cannibals. Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Samuel Eliot Morison wrote in his famous biography of Columbus: “The searching party found plentiful evidence of these unpleasant Carib habits which were responsible for a new word — cannibal — in the European languages. In the huts deserted by the warriors, who ungallantly fled, they found large cuts and joints of human flesh, shin bones set aside to make arrows of, caponized Arawak boy captives who were being fattened for the griddle, and girl captives who were mainly used to produce babies, which the Caribs regarded as a particularly toothsome morsel.”
View source“Throughout his years in the New World, Columbus enacted policies of forced labor in which natives were put to work for the sake of profits,” History.com reports. “Later, Columbus sent thousands of peaceful Taino ‘Indians’ from the island of Hispaniola to Spain to be sold. Many died en route.” While Columbus helped promote the horrors of the slave trade, claims that he committed “genocide” are not true. Most of the atrocities in the New World after Columbus was dead and gone.
View sourceRelated reading: “Columbus’ Claims of Cannibal Raids May Have Been True After All” – Live Science
View source- During his lifetime, Columbus was both celebrated as a hero and villainized by political and professional enemies.
While Columbus was a massive success on the sea, he was easily outmaneuvered and betrayed by professional politicians and bureaucrats back at home. It is on their dubious, self-serving accounts that modern attacks on Columbus’s reputation are based. In his own day, these attacks made the explorer’s life a misery.
View sourceOf his critics during his lifetime, Columbus wrote, “They judge me there as a governor who had gone to Sicily or to a city or town under a regular government, where the laws can be observed in toto without fear of losing all, and I am suffering grave injury. I should be judged as a captain who went from Spain to the Indies to conquer a people numerous and warlike, whose manners and religion are very different from ours, who live in sierras and mountains, without fixed settlements, and where by divine will I have placed under the sovereignty of the King and Queen our lords, an Other World, whereby Spain, which was reckoned poor, is become the richest of countries.”
View sourceIn his Lettera Rarissima to the Spanish crown, Columbus wrote what might serve as the final word on his historical legacy: “Let those who are fond of blaming and finding fault, while they sit safely at home, ask, ‘Why did you not do thus and so?’ I wish they were on this voyage; I well believe that another voyage of a different kind awaits them, or our faith is naught.”
View sourceRelated video: “Goodbye, Columbus Day” – Steven Crowder
View source
He ventured where no other man of his age dared to go. He saw things no other man of his age had ever seen. He discovered a New World.
For centuries, he was universally admired as a hero. Now he’s widely considered to be a despoiler of paradise, an enslaver, and a genocidal maniac.
I’m talking, of course, about Christopher Columbus. So which is true? Is he a hero—or a villain?
The truth is complicated, as the truth often is—especially when you have to go back 500 years to find it. But let’s try to get as close as we can.
Columbus was born in 1451 in the port city of Genoa, Italy. At a time when birth often determined destiny, his origins were entirely unremarkable. His father was a middle-class wool weaver who expected his son to follow the same path. But Columbus had different plans. The Age of Discovery was dawning. The future belonged to the bold. And the bold went to sea.
By the time he turned 30, Columbus had sailed to Iceland, Ireland, and Africa. Somewhere on his many voyages, he became obsessed with the idea that there was a westward sea route from Europe to India. But there were no maps to consult, only wild rumors of sea monsters and endless ocean.
He put together the 15th-century version of a PowerPoint presentation for the king of Portugal, then the world’s leading sea power. But the king, heeding the advice of his experts, turned him down. It simply couldn’t be done, the experts told the king. It was pure speculation, and an expensive one at that.
So Columbus took his plans to Spain. But King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella weren’t interested either—at least, not at first.
Columbus persevered. After eight years, they finally relented. They gave the explorer three small ships. There was a time when every schoolkid knew their names—the Niña, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria—and the year in which Columbus set sail: 1492.
Except for a compass and the stars, Columbus had virtually no navigation tools at his disposal. He was, to mix metaphors, flying blind. He was heading west. That’s about all he knew.
Once the ships left the Canary Islands, they were on their own. His crews stayed loyal for the first week, but by the third week, they had lost their nerve. Columbus, however, never lost his. By sheer force of will, he kept his men in line.
Finally, after 10 long weeks at sea, on the night of October 11, Columbus spotted land.
He called it San Salvador. Today we know it as the Bahamas.
There Columbus and his men encountered the Taino tribe. The first encounter between Europe and the Americas went well. The Taino were curious and helpful. Columbus was emphatic that his crew treat them with kindness and respect.
Lest you think that Columbus stumbled on the Garden of Eden, the islands were also inhabited by the Caribs, a tribe of cannibals for whom, according to Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Samuel Eliot Morison, babies were a delicacy—or, in Morison’s words, “a...toothsome morsel.” Like every place else on Earth, in every time in history, the local peoples were a mixed bag. Some good, some not so good.
Upon his return to Spain, word of the Italian explorer’s successful voyage quickly spread throughout Europe. A New World had been discovered, and the Old World would never be the same.
Columbus was a man meant for the sea. On land, he was easily outmaneuvered and betrayed by professional politicians and bureaucrats. It is on their dubious, self-serving accounts that modern attacks on Columbus’s reputation are based. In his own day, these attacks made the explorer’s life a misery.
Columbus was not blameless. He sold natives into slavery. But the explorer did not invent slavery, which was common around the world long before and long after Columbus’s time.
As for the charge of genocide, there was no genocide. There were atrocities—most occurring after Columbus was dead and gone. There was also widespread intermarriage between the Spaniards and the natives, which eventually led to the people we now call Hispanic or Latino. You don’t marry people you seek to destroy.
It’s unfair to focus only on Columbus’s sins. It’s also unfair to judge someone who lived 500 years ago by today’s standards.
His own assessment of his actions is much more revealing: “Let those who are fond of blaming and finding fault, while they sit safely at home, ask, ‘Why did you not do thus and so?’”
There’s a reason why Columbus has so long been celebrated—why so many statues, schools, towns, cities, a national holiday, an Ivy League university, and even a country bear his name.
It’s this simple fact:
When we celebrate Columbus, we celebrate the arrival of Western Civilization to the Western Hemisphere. And if you can’t celebrate that, it says much more about your moral compass than about history’s greatest explorer.
I’m Michael Knowles, host of The Michael Knowles Show, for Prager University.
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