1. MYTH: Columbus
was sailing to prove the world was round.
FACT: Every educated
person at the end of the fifteenth century knew the earth was a sphere, a fact
known since antiquity. What was in dispute was the earth’s circumference, which
Columbus underestimated by one-fourth.
2. MYTH: Queen
Isabella sold her crown jewels to finance the first journey.
FACT: The royal treasury
of Spain was depleted after the completion of the conquest of Granada early in
1492. However, Luis de Santangel, the royal treasurer, was able to secure
funding by reaching out to the Crusading societies throughout the
Mediterranean, as well as other financial backers from Spain and elsewhere. The
crown put up very little to finance the journey.
3. MYTH: There was a
priest on board the Santa Maria in 1492.
FACT: Because of the
dangers involved, there were no priests or friars on the first voyage, despite
the deep piety of Columbus. Many of the paintings of the first landfall in the
new world on San Salvador show a priest with Columbus—contrary to the facts.
There were five priests on the second voyage: Benedictine Father Buil; the
Jeronymite Father Ramon Pane; and three Franciscans.
4. MYTH: Columbus
introduced slavery to the New World.
FACT: Slavery was already
widespread among the native Indians when Columbus arrived. Columbus was
insistent on the fair treatment of the Indians, a policy which gained him many
enemies as governor of Hispaniola. Bartolome de las Casas, a Spanish friar who
worked for the protection of the Indians, is quick to excoriate his fellow
Spaniards in their grave abuses, but is filled with nothing but respect and
admiration for Columbus. The mass subjugation and importation of Africans to
the Americas did not begin until a generation after Columbus’ death.
5. MYTH: Columbus
died a pauper, in chains, in a Spanish prison.
FACT: Despite the fact
that the Spanish crown retracted some of the privileges promised to Columbus,
he was relatively wealthy at the time of his death. Although he returned to
Spain in chains in 1500 after his third voyage, the King and Queen apologized
for the misunderstanding and had them removed.
On May 20, 1506, the Vigil
of the Ascension, Christopher Columbus lay on his deathbed in his apartment at
Valladolid, surrounded by his fellow Franciscans and his sons. As the friars
chanted Compline, his last words echoed those of Christ on the cross: In manus
tuas, Domine, commendo spiritum meum. (Into your hands, O Lord, I commend my
spirit.)
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