American Minute with Bill Federer
The 4 Voyages of Columbus
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M
uslim Turks conquered Constantinople on May 29, 1453.
William Lawson Grant,
Professor of Colonial History at Queens University, Kingston, Ontario, wrote in the introduction to
Voyages and Explorations
(Toronto, The Courier Press, Limited, 1911, A.S. Barnes Company):
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"The history of Western Civilization begins in a conflict with the Orient, a conflict of which it may be the end is not yet.
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... But the routes between East and West have been trodden by the caravans of trade more often even than by the feet of armies.
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... The treasures of the East were long brought overland to Alexandria, or Constantinople, or the cities of the Levant, and thence distributed to Europe by the galleys of Genoa or of Venice.
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... But when the Turk placed himself astride the Bosporus, and made Egypt his feudatory, new routes had to be found ..."
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William Lawson Grant continued his introduction to
Voyages and Explorations
:
"In the search for these were made the three greatest voyages in history, those of
Columbus,
of
Vasco da Gama,
and greatest of all of
Magellan ...
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... In his search for the riches of Cipangu (Japan),
Columbus
stumbled upon America.
The great Genoese
lived and died under the illusion that he had reached the outmost verge of Asia."
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It is an eye-opener to
Columbus'
detractors to realized that reason he set sail in the first place was because Muslim Turks cut off the LAND routes to India and China, causing Europeans to look for a SEA route.
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In 1498, Portuguese explorer
Vasco da Gama
successfully sailed around South Africa to India.
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But 6 years earlier, another explorer proposed a SEA route.
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Beginning in 1492,
Christopher Columbus
took FOUR voyages to the New World:
1st
voyage, 1492-1493, he DISCOVERED land;
2nd
voyage, 1493-1496, he encountered a hurricane, malaria, and CANNIBALS;
3rd
voyage, 1498-1500, he faced doldrums, rebellion, and was ARRESTED;
4th
voyage, 1502-1504, he survived another hurricane, explored Panama, and was SHIPWRECKED on Jamaica for a year.
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Columbus's
FIRST voyage (1492-1493), was truly historic. He used his knowledge of the "trade winds" to make
the longest voyage ever out of the sight of land.
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Thinking he had made it to India, he referred to the inhabitants as
"Indians,"
and the name stuck.
These were peaceful Arawak natives.
Columbus
thought that Cuba was the tip of China and that Hispaniola (Dominican Republican/Haiti) was Japan.
Returning to Europe,
Columbus'
ship,
Santa Maria,
hit a reef and wrecked. He left 39 sailors in a make-shift fort named La Navidad.
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On his SECOND voyage (1493-1496),
Columbus
was frustratingly saddled with 17 ships and 1,500 mostly get-rich-quick opportunists.
This was the doings of the jealous
Spanish Bishop Juan Rodriguez de Fonseca,
who continually undermined
Columbus
at the royal court, as he thought the Spanish Monarchs should never have given so much authority to a
"non-Spaniard,"
Columbus
being from the Italian city of
Genoa.
In this sense,
Columbus
was the victim of racial discrimination.
Because of
Bishop Fonseca,
Columbus
' main desire and goal of finding
India
and
China
had to be made secondary to managing hundreds of ambitious settlers.
Looking for a location for settlement,
Columbus
explored Puerto Rico and Jamaica.
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Arriving at La Navidad, they were shocked to find that all the sailors
Columbus
had left the previous year were all killed.
The Spanish settlers felt
Columbus
misrepresented the new world "paradise," especially after they encountered a hurricane and malaria.
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Instead of paradise, Spaniards were shocked to discover that there were Carib natives, who emasculated, sodomized and cannibalized the peaceful Arawak natives.
Spanish settlers grew impatient at having to obey
Columbus,
who was, after all, not even Spanish, but rather an Italian from the city of Genoa.
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Columbus
unfortunately yielded to the demands of greedy settlers and let them set up European-style feudal plantations, called "mayorazgos," which set a precedent for generations of mistreatment of native populations.
Columbus
left his brothers
Diego
and
Bartholomew
in charge of Santo Domingo on the island of Hispaniola, and he sailed back to Spain.
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On his THIRD voyage (1498-1500),
Columbus
barely made it across the southern Atlantic, as he encountered the windless "doldrums."
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When the winds finally picked up,
Columbus
named the first land he saw after the Trinity --
"Trinidad."
Columbus
became the first European to set foot on South America, planting the Spanish flag at the Paria Peninsula of present-day
Venezuela,
August 1, 1498.
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He explored the beautiful
Orinoco River,
thinking it was the outer regions of the Garden of Eden.
When
Columbus
arrived back at his settlement of
Santo Domingo,
he found that the g
reedy Spanish settlers had rebelled
against his brothers.
In despair,
Columbus
sent a letter to the King, pleading for help.
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The plea was intercepted by
Bishop Fonseca,
who convinced the King that, instead of sending help, he should replace
Columbus
as governor.
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The King sent replacement governor
Bobadillo
in 1500.
Bobadillo
arrested
Columbus
and his brothers, and sent them back to Spain in
chains.
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Columbus
wrote to a friend and confidante of the Queen,
Dona Juana de Torres:
"I undertook a new voyage to the New World which hitherto had been hidden ...
They judge me there as a governor who had gone to Sicily or to a city or town under a regular government ...
I should be judged as a captain who went from Spain to the Indies."
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After a two year delay,
Columbus
was permitted to sail on his FOURTH voyage, MAY 12, 1502, from Cadiz, Spain.
He was forbidden to visit his settlement of
Santo Domingo
, but upon reaching the Caribbean,
Columbus
became alarmed by another hurricane brewing.
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Weighing the risk, he entered the harbor of
Santo Domingo
to warn them of the approaching danger and to seek shelter for his ships.
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The replacement governor,
Bobadillo,
was preparing to set sail for
Spain
with
24 ships of gold,
heading directly into the hurricane.
The warning of
Columbus
was spurned, as he had become a persona-non-grata.
Ordered to leave the harbor,
Columbus
sailed as fast as he could to seek shelter on the other side of the island.
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Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924
wjfederer@gmail.com
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The hurricane destroyed
Santo Domingo.
All but one of the ships headed to Spain sank, including the one carrying
Bobadillo.
The ship that survived had been the slowest and had not cleared the island mangroves when the hurricane hit.
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When it reached Spain, to everyone's amazement, it was found to be the one
carrying Columbus' portion of the gold,
per his agreement with the Monarchs.
The providential nature of this incident vindicated
Columbus'
reputation, though he did not find out about it for over a year, as he was blown around the Caribbean.
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Describing the violent weather,
Columbus
recorded:
"The tempest arose and wearied me so that I knew not where to turn, my old wound opened up, and for 9 days I was lost without hope of life; eyes never beheld the sea so angry and covered with foam ..."
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Columbus
continued:
"The wind not only prevented our progress, but offered no opportunity to run behind any headland for shelter; hence we were forced to keep out in this bloody ocean, seething like a pot on a hot fire. The people were so worn out that they longed for death."
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After a day and a half of continuous lightning,
Columbus'
15-year-old son,
Ferdinand,
recorded that on December 13, 1502, a waterspout passed between the ships:
"... the which had they not dissolved by reciting the Gospel according to St. John, it would have swamped whatever it struck...for it draws water up to the clouds in a column thicker than a waterbutt, twisting it about like a whirlwind."
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Columbus'
biographer, Samuel Eliot Morrison described
Admiral Columbus:
"It was the Admiral who exorcised the waterspout. From his Bible he read of that famous tempest off Capernaum, concluding, 'Fear not, it is I!'
Then clasping the Bible in his left hand, with drawn sword he traced a cross in the sky and a circle around his whole fleet."
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Columbus
briefly landed in
Panama,
but was too ill and too suspicious of the natives to cross to the Pacific side.
After being attacked by Indians, with his ships worm-eaten and taking on water,
Columbus
barely made it to the
Island of Jamaica
where he was shipwrecked for a year.
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Natives at first accommodated them, but the situation deteriorated, and they began to threaten them.
Columbus
correctly predicted a
lunar eclipse
which convinced the natives to respect him.
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Columbus'
captain,
Diego Méndez de Segura,
set off from
Jamaica
with several natives to cross 450 miles of open sea to reach Hispaniola (Haiti).
Finally being rescued,
Columbus
returned to Spain on November 7, 1504.
Three weeks later,
Columbus'
chief patron,
Queen Isabella,
died.
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Columbus
died a year and a half later at the age of 55.
Though tragically unsuccessful as a governor,
Columbus
was nevertheless one of the most renowned sailors and explorers in the world who changed the course of history.
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While shipwrecked and in pain, July 7, 1503,
Columbus
wrote his
Lettera Rarissima,
not knowing if anyone would read it:
"The Indians were many and united and attacked ... I was outside very much alone, on this rude coast, with a high fever and very fatigued.
There was no hope of escape. In this state, I climbed painfully to the highest part of the ship and cried out for help with a fearful voice ...
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... At length, groaning with exhaustion, I fell asleep, and heard a compassionate voice saying,
'O fool, and slow to believe and serve thy God, the God of every man! ... From thy birth He hath ever held thee in special charge ...
Of those barriers of the Ocean Sea, which were closed with such mighty chains, He hath given thee the keys ...
Turn thou to Him and acknowledge thy faults; His mercy is infinite; thine old age shall not hinder thee from performing mighty deeds ... Whatever He promises He fulfills with interest; that is His way."
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American Minute is a registered trademark of William J. Federer. Permission is granted to forward, reprint, or duplicate, with acknowledgment.
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