Let’s talk about the first of the really well known explorers:
Christopher Columbus, whose name can be seen all around Central and South
America as Cristóbal Colón. Although Columbus was born an
Italian, in Genoa, he obtained sponsorship from the rulers of both Portugal
and Spain and made four trips to the New World. He was amongst those who
believed that the world was round – not a widely held view at the
time – and he longed to sail west to the Azores and further, to the legendary
lands described by Marco Polo.
As every schoolchild in the UK knows, “In fourteen hundred and
ninety two, Columbus sailed the ocean blue”. Even though the Scandinavians
had reached North America a long time before Columbus, Columbus’
trip was important in that he was amongst the first Europeans to set foot
on so many islands in the Caribbean, and land masses in Central and the
northern part of South America. The sad thing is that Columbus thought
he had reached the East Indies and that the islands of the Caribbean were
in islands off mainland China.
Of course, there were commercial motives in all these great ocean-going
trips, which often took years to undertake and in dreadful conditions
on board. These lay in buying new and exotic spices, although Columbus
was not too successful in this – he found capsicums and is also
attributed as having bought back tobacco, known locally as a “bewitching
vegetable” from the West Indies in 1496. On the one hand, he is believed
to have possessed great courage and explored parts of the world that were
completely chartered territory – his crew were in constant fear of toppling
over the edge of the world. On the other, historians reckon that he was
really quite greedy, constantly looking for increased wealth and a terrible
administrator (although a fearless explorer) and was cruel to the local
people he found in these new territories.
Next month: Vasco da Gama