• =?UTF-8?Q?Original_letter_from_Columbus_announcing_=e2=80=98discove?= =

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 4 09:37:29 2023
    XPost: soc.history.medieval

    It is best to go to the citation: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/sep/30/original-letter-from-columbus-announcing-discovery-of-america-goes-on-sale-for-first-time

    Original letter from Columbus announcing ‘discovery’ of America goes on sale for first time
    The explorer is widely thought of as an exploiter today, and didn’t know
    east from west. But a version of his boastful missive is expected to
    fetch up to £1.2m at auction

    Donna Ferguson
    Sat 30 Sep 2023 09.00 EDT
    In 1493, Christopher Columbus wrote a letter that would change the
    landscape of the modern world. “I sailed to the Indies with the fleet
    that the illustrious King and Queen, our sovereigns, gave me, where I discovered a great many islands, inhabited by numberless people,” he
    wrote after his return to Europe to royal treasurer Luis de Santángel.
    “Of all, I have taken possession for their Highnesses.”

    The events relayed in the letter were “the first report of a voyage that really did change the world”, says Columbus biographer Professor Felipe Fernández-Armesto.

    Now a rare 1493 Latin translation of this letter, printed on an early
    printing press to swiftly convey news of Columbus’s “discoveries” to elite Europeans, is expected to fetch up to £1.2m ($1.5m) at a
    Christie’s auction this month.

    “[In current times] Columbus has lost his former status as an honorary all-American hero and quasi-founding father, but notoriety rarely hurts
    one’s market value, especially in the US. Witness Donald Trump,” says Fernández-Armesto.

    Columbus had no idea that, at the time, he was the first European since
    the Vikings to encounter North America – he thought he had travelled to islands near Japan. But his voyage created, for the first time, “a
    viable, commercially exploitable route” across the Atlantic and opened
    up communications between long-sundered cultures on either side of the
    ocean, Fernández-Armesto says.

    The letter praises the rich natural assets of the islands Columbus
    encountered, and he portrays the “extraordinarily timid” native people
    he met there as “so unsuspicious and so generous” they are “like fools”.
    It is now seen by historians as a piece of propaganda that heralds the
    start of the European colonisation of the New World.

    By exploiting the resources of this apparently “new” hemisphere,
    European countries would finally start to catch up with China, Islamic
    nations and India in power and wealth – while also enslaving and
    exploiting people all over the globe. “Like him or not, you can’t deny Columbus’s importance,” Fernández-Armesto says.

    Columbus depicted by the artist Emile Lassalle in 1839.
    A master of ‘self-promotion and propaganda’: Columbus depicted by the artist Emile Lassalle in 1839. Photograph: Famoso/Alamy
    The document has been in a private Swiss collection for nearly a century
    and is described by Christie’s as “the earliest obtainable edition of Columbus’s letter”, whose international publication triggered one of the first “media frenzies” for the printed word.

    “The significance of the letter is its wide diffusion, thanks to the
    printing press,” says Professor Geoffrey Symcox from the University of California, Los Angeles. Using what was then cutting-edge technology,
    the Spanish crown sent copies to the courts of Europe to stake Spain’s claim,says Symcox. “The news circulated rapidly, not just through
    diplomatic channels but mercantile channels as well.”

    The impact of the text demonstrates just how good Columbus was at public relations, according to the Cuban-American medieval historian Professor
    Teo Ruiz: “He made sure everybody knew what he had done: that he had
    reached the islands of the Indies [a collective term for India and the
    Far East] by sailing westwards. Which, of course, was not true.”

    Earlier explorers had been unwilling to sail west because they didn’t
    dare risk being unable to return home. But Columbus, who was the son of
    a weaver and self-taught as an explorer, had made a series of wild
    calculations without standardising measurements, and concluded the world
    was 25% smaller than it is. He then convinced the Spanish monarchs, King Ferdinand II and Isabella I, to provide him with a fleet of ships so he
    could sail west and find a new sea route to Asia, which would prevent
    Portugal from having a monopoly on the spice trade.

    He just bumped into these islands. He did not know and could not even
    imagine they were there
    Professor Teo Ruiz
    In a classic case of confirmation bias, as soon as he reached land, he
    claimed to be in the far east. In fact, he had arrived in the West
    Indies. Then he visited Cuba, Haiti and San Domingo. “He just bumped
    into these islands. He did not know and could not even imagine they were there,” says Ruiz.

    An intrepid sailor, Columbus had managed to capitalise on the Earth’s prevailing winds by charting a south-western course to the American
    continent via the Canary Islands. In doing so, he unwittingly
    demonstrated how following winds offered new opportunities for
    long-range navigation and trade, initiating what became known as “the Columbian Exchange”: the irreversible transfer of people, flora, fauna, diseases, ideas and commodities across the Atlantic.

    “What he did achieve, he didn’t recognise he’d done,” says Professor William Phillips, a Columbus expert at the University of Minnesota. As
    for Columbus’s letter, “it was self-promotion and propaganda” – a 15th-century example of fake news.

    It also marks one of the earliest appearances of the “noble savage” archetype. Columbus’s letter, Symcox says, portrays the naked Indigenous people he meets as “guileless innocents living a simple life in the
    forest – and thus ripe for the civilising mission that Europeans took
    upon themselves in their dealings with peoples in the Americas and Africa”.


    Later, as a brutal colonial governor and viceroy, Columbus would
    systematically exploit the Taíno people of the Caribbean, forcing them
    to mine gold and deliver quotas on pain of harsh punishment. Hundreds
    were enslaved by Columbus and shipped to Spain to be sold, and others
    were massacred or subjected to extreme violence and cruelty.

    Some also caught deadly diseases such as smallpox and measles, brought
    by the Spaniards. It is estimated that, within a few decades of
    Columbus’ arrival, most of the Taíno had died from enslavement, massacre
    or disease.

    Now the darker side of the European intrusion into the Americas is
    better known, Phillips says, Columbus has come to be seen by historians
    as “the first of the exploiters rather than the first of the explorers”.

    In the US, Columbus statues and monuments have been torn down and
    vandalised, and many states no longer recognise Columbus Day, a federal holiday, choosing instead to celebrate Indigenous Peoples’ Day.



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