Papers > History > Christopher Columbus and the destruction of the Indies
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Christopher Columbus and the destruction of the Indies
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Question 2: The social and political impact of Columbus’ Journal on Europe and the “distant lands” he encountered during his journey.
Christopher Columbus was born in 1451, the son of a weaver in Genoa, Italy, a seafaring city. ... Growing up in a major sea port, Columbus naturally began a life of seafaring in his early teens. ...
Columbus soon began to develop his theory of sailing west to the Indies in what he called his “Enterprise of the Indies” and approached the Spanish monarchs with the proposal in 1491. ... His Journal to the King and Queen of Spain of his encounter with the Indies (to the Europeans of that age, all land east of the Indus River was “the Indies”) paints a rather explicit picture albeit somewhat biased in description. ... Gold, he believed, obtained from the riches of the Indies was the means to accomplish this task in which he wrote in his Journal on 26 Dec 1492:
“. ...
The Europeans were getting used to the spices, silk, cotton, precious stones, perfumes and drugs coming from the Indies. The fall of Constantinople in 1453 had cut off the land routes to the Indies and thus the supply. ... The Journal of Columbus opens up a new chapter in their quest for these luxuries to rival Portugal who had travel eastward to much fame and fortune.
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Title: Christopher Columbus and the destruction of the Indies
Words: 1037 Rating: None Pages: 4.1 submitted by: shelle
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