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H
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    Wild Discovery    

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This holiday pays homage to Christopher Columbus, one of the best known explorers to this day. Born in the port city of Genoa, Italy, Columbus was convinced that the world was round, and thus if a ship was directed to the west, it would eventually reach the Indies in the east. At the time, all of eastern Asia, including China, Japan, and India were considered part of the area referred to as the Indies. To prove the idea of a spherical planet, Columbus set out to track down royal sponsorship for an exploratory voyage, finally finding it at the court of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain. They outfitted three ships with cloth, glass beads, and other goods for trading and Columbus and his crew navigated the infamous Nina, Pinta, and Santa Maria across the Atlantic, landing in the New World on October 12, 1492. This date was officially acknowledged by President Franklin Roosevelt to be Columbus Day in 1937, and as of 1971, the second Monday in October has been set aside as a federal holiday to commemorate it.

T
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Though Columbus is no longer credited with the discovery of the Americas, as evidence of earlier voyages made by the Vikings and other explorers has come to light, his arrival in the New World was at least in part responsible for the colonization of the continents and the civilizations that have developed as a result. The first people to commemorate Columbus and his legacy were Italian Americans in cities across the country. In some states, celebrations of Columbus Day have been augmented with commemorations of certain ethnic groups, such as the Native Americans for example, whose lives were no doubt the most affected by the appearance of Columbus and the influx of Spanish settlers that followed. Colorado was the first state to adopt the celebration of Columbus Day in 1905.

 

A Quip From An Old Movie
I can't remember the name of the movie, but the quip goes like this.

The plot involved a great football player who was not too bright (nothing new there).  To make the college team, he had to pass a test in history. There was general agreement that one of the questions would be on Columbus. His tutors gave him this rhyme on Columbus.

Columbus sailed the "the ocean blue" in fourteen hundred and "ninety two".

Unfortunately for the player and the team, when the question came up in the exam, he remembered the rhyme like this.

Columbus sailed the "the deep blue sea" in fourteen hundred and "ninety three".

 

Flat or Round

To make a better myth, American culture has perpetuated the idea that Columbus was boldly forging ahead while everyone else, even his own crew, imagined the world was flat. "The superstitious sailors ... grew increasingly mutinous," according to The American Pageant, because they were "fearful of sailing over the edge of the world." In truth, few people on both sides of the Atlantic believed in 1492 that the world was flat. Most Europeans and Native Americans knew the world to be round. It looks round. It casts a circular shadow on the moon. Sailors see its roundness when ships disappear over the horizon, hull first, then sails.

 

The Story
Today we take for granted that the world is round. In the fifteenth century, however, most people believed the world was flat. They thought that monsters or a trip over the edge of the earth waited for anybody who sailed outside the limits of known territory. People laughed at or jailed others who dared think that the world was in the shape of a globe.

There were educated persons, however, who reasoned that the world must be round. An Italian named Christopher Columbus was bold enough to push this notion, and ask for money to explore the seas, and find what he thought would be the other hemisphere of the earth. Portugal, Italy and England refused to support such a venture.

At that time, spice merchants were looking for an easier route to Asia. They traveled south past Africa, around the Cape of Good Hope, and continued eastward. Christopher Columbus convinced Queen Isabella of Spain that it would be easier to sail directly west and find the rich treasures of India and Asia. A new route would be found, he said, and possible new lands for Spain.

Columbus first asked Queen Isabella for help in 1486, but it was years before she agreed... provided that he conquer some of the islands and mainland for Spain. Columbus would also be given the title of "Admiral of All the Ocean Seas," and receive one-tenth of the riches that came from any of his discoveries.

Finally, on August 3, 1492, he and ninety men set sail on the flagship Santa Maria. Two other ships, the Nina and the Pinta, came with him. They sailed west. Three long months went by. His men became tired and sick, and threatened to turn the ships back. Columbus encouraged them, certain that they would find the spice trail to the East. On October 11th, ten o'clock at night, Columbus saw a light. The Pinta kept sailing, and reported that the light was, in fact, land. The next morning at dawn they landed.

Christopher Columbus and his crew had expected to see people native to India, or be taken to see the great leader Khan. They called the first people they saw "Indians." They had gone ashore in their best clothes, knelt and praised God for arriving safely. From the "Indians" they learned that the island was called Guanahani. Columbus christened it San Salvador and claimed it immediately for Spain. When they landed on the island that is now Cuba, they thought they were in Japan. After three subsequent voyages, Columbus was still unenlightened. He died a rich and famous man, but he never knew that he discovered lands that few people had imagined were there.

Columbus had stopped at what are now the Caribbean Islands, either Watling Island, Grand Turk Island, or Samana Cay. In 1926, Watling Island was renamed San Salvador and acknowledged as the first land in the New World. Recently, however, some people have begun to dispute the claim. Three men from Miami, Florida have started a movement to recognize Conception Island as the one that Columbus and his men first sighted and landed on. The controversy has not yet been resolve.

Few celebrations marked the discovery until hundreds of years later. The continent was not even named after Columbus, but an Italian explorer named Amerigo Vespucci. In 1792, a ceremony was held in New York honoring Columbus, and a monument was dedicated to him. Soon after that, the city of Washington was officially named the District of Columbia and became the capital of the United States. In 1892, a statue of Columbus was raised at the beginning of Columbus Avenue in New York City. At the Columbian Exposition held in Chicago that year, replicas of Columbus's three ships were displayed.

Americans might not have a Columbus Day if Christopher Columbus had not been born in Italy. Out of pride for their native son, the Italian population of New York City organised the first celebration of the discovery of America on October 12, 1866. The next year, more Italian organisations in other cities held banquets, parades and dances on that date. In 1869, when Italians of San Francisco celebrated October 12, they called it Columbus Day.

In 1905, Colorado became the first state to observe a Columbus Day. Over the next few decades other states followed. In 1937, then- President Franklin Roosevelt proclaimed every October 12 as Columbus Day. Since 1971, it has been celebrated on the second Monday in October.

Although it is generally accepted that Christopher Columbus was the first European to have discovered the New World of the Americas, there is still some controversy over this claim. Some researchers and proponents of other explorers attribute the first sightings to the early Scandinavian Vikings or the voyages of Irish missionaries which predate the Columbus visit in 1492. The controversy may never be fully resolved to everyone's satisfaction, but 1992 marked the 500th anniversary of the Columbus discovery.