1451-1506
Columbus, by attempting to find a westward route from Europe to the
Orient, inadvertently discovers the Americas, and thereby had a great
influence on World history than he could possibly have anticipated. His
discovery, which inaugurated the age of exploration and colonization in
the New World, was one of the critical turning points in history. It
opened to the people of Europe two new continents for the settlement of
their expanding populations, and provided a source of mineral wealth and
raw materials that altered the economy of Europe. His discovery led to
the destructions of the civilizations of the Americans Indians. In the
long run, it also led to the formation of a new set of nations in the
Western hemisphere, vastly different from the Indian nations which had
one inhabited the region, and greatly affecting the nations of the Old
World. The main outlines of Columbus's story are well known. He was born
in Genoa, Italy, in 1451. When he grew up, he became a ship's caption
and a skilled navigator. He eventually became convinced that it was
possible to find a practical route to East Asia by sailing due west
across the Atlantic Ocean, and he pursued this idea with great tenacity.
Eventually, he persuaded Queen Isabella I of Castile to finance his
voyage of exploration. His ships left Spain on August 3, 1492. Their
first stop was at the Canary Islands, off the coast of Africa. They left
the Canaries on September 6 and sailed due west. It was a long voyage,
and his sailors became frightened and wished to turn back. Columbus,
however, insisted upon continuing, and on October 12, 1492, land was
sighted. Columbus arrived back in Spain the following March, and the
triumphant explorer was received with the highest honors. He made three
subsequent voyages across the Atlantic in the vain hope of making direct
contact with China or Japan. Columbus clung to the idea that he had
found a route to East Asia long after most other people realized that he
had not. Isabella had promised Columbus that he would become governor of
any lands which he discovered. However, he was so unsuccessful as an
administrator that he was eventually relieved of his duties, and sent
back to spin in chains. There, he was promptly set free, but he was
never again given an administrative position. However, the common rumor
that he died in poverty is without foundation. At the time of his death,
in 1506, he was fairly wealthy. It is obvious that Columbus's first trip
had a revolutionary impact upon European history, and an even greater
effect on the Americas. The one date that every school child knows is
1492. Still, there are several possible objections to ranking Columbus
so high upon this list. One objection is that Columbus was not the first
European to discover the New World. Leif Ericson, the Viking sailor, had
reached America several centuries before him, and it is plausible that
several other Europeans crossed the Atlantic in the interval between the
Viking and Columbus. Historically, however, Leif Ericson is a relatively
unimportant figure. Knowledge of his discoveries never became
widespread, nor did they trigger any large changes in either Europe or
America. News of Columbus's discoveries, on the other hand, spread very
rapidly throughout Europe. Within a few years of his return, and as a
direct consequence of his discoveries, many additional expeditions to
the New World were made and the conquest and colonization of the new
territories began. Like other figures in this book, Columbus is
vulnerable to the argument that what he did would have been accomplished
even if he had never lived. Fifteenth-century Europe was already in a
ferment: commerce was expending, exploration was in evitable. The
Portuguese, in fact, had actively been searching for a new route to the
Indies for a considerable time before Columbus. It in deeded seems
probable that America would sooner or later have been discovered by the
Europeans; it is even possible that the delay would not have been very
great. But subsequent developments would have been quite different if
America had originally been discovered in 1510, say, by a French or
English expedition, instead of in 1492 by Columbus, In any event,
Columbus was the man who actually did discovered America. A third
possible objection is that even before Columbus's voyages, many
fifteenth-century Europeans already knew that the world was round. That
Greek philosophers had suggested theory many centuries earlier, and the
firm endorsement of the hypothesis by Aristotle was enough to cause its
acceptance by educated Europeans in the 1400s. However, Columbus is not
famous for showing that the earth was round. (As a matter of fact, he
didn't really succeed in doing that.) He is famous for discovering the
New World, and neither fifteenth-century Europeans nor Aristotle had any
knowledge of the existence of the American continents. Columbus's
character was not entirely admirable. He was exceptionally avaricious;
in fact, one important reason that Columbus encountered difficulties in
persuading Isabella to finance him was that he drove an extremely greedy
bargain. Also, though it may not be fair to judge him by today's ethical
standards, he treated the Indians with shocking cruelty. This is not,
however, a list of the noblest characters in history, but rather of the
most influential ones, and by that criterion Columbus deserves a place
near the top of the list |