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The top 5 misconceptions about
Christopher Columbus
He didn't 'discover' America, but he did earn a
place in history
Cristina Quicler / AP file
Tourists walk by the tomb of Spanish explorer Christopher Columbus in the Cathedral of
Seville, Spain. Spanish researchers recently determined that Columbus' remains are indeed
buried in the tomb, based on DNA results. Another Columbus tomb is located in the Dominican
Republic, but DNA tests have not been conducted on the remains buried there.
By Christopher Wanjek LiveScience Bad Medicine columnist
updated 10/10/2011 12:46:50 PM ET
Monday is Columbus Day, time to buy appliances on sale and contemplate other things that
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have nothing to do with Christopher Columbus. So much of what we say about Columbus is
either wholly untrue or greatly exaggerated.
Here are a few of the top offenders.
1. Columbus set out to prove the world was round.
If he did, he was about 2,000 years too late. Ancient Greek mathematicians had already
proven that the earth was round, not flat.
Pythagoras in the sixth century B.C. was one of the originators of the idea. Aristotle in the
fourth century B.C. provided the physical evidence, such as the shadow of the Earth on the
moon and the curvature of the Earth known by all sailors approaching land. And by the third
century B.C., Eratosthenes determined our planet's shape and circumference using basic
geometry. In the second century, Claudius Ptolemy wrote the "Almagest," the mathematical
and astronomical treatise on planetary shapes and motions, describing the spherical Earth.
This text was well known throughout educated Europe in Columbus' time. [Related: Earth Is
Flat in Many People's Minds]
Columbus, a self-taught man, greatly underestimated Earth's circumference. He also thought
Europe was wider than it actually was and that Japan was farther from the coast of China than
it really was. For these reasons, he figured he could reach Asia by going west, a concept that
most of educated Europe at the time thought was daft — not because the earth was flat, but
because Columbus' math was so wrong. Columbus, in effect, got lucky by bumping into land
that, of course, wasn't Asia.
The Columbus flat-earth myth perhaps originated with Washington Irving's 1828 biography of
Columbus; there's no mention of this before that. His crew wasn't nervous about falling off the
earth.
2. Columbus discovered America.
Yes, let's ignore the fact that millions of humans already inhabited this land later to be called
the Americas, having discovered it millennia before. And let's ignore that whole Leif Ericson
voyage to Greenland and modern-day Canada around the year 1000. If Columbus discovered
America, he himself didn't know. Until his death he claimed to have landed in Asia, even
though most navigators knew he didn't. [Top 10 Intrepid Explorers]
What Columbus came across was the archipelago of the Bahamas and then the island later
named Hispaniola, now split into Haiti and the Dominican Republic. On his subsequent
voyages he went farther south, to Central and South America. He never got close to what is
now called the United States.
So why does the United States celebrate the guy who thought he found a nifty new route to
Asia and the lands described by Marco Polo? This is because the early United States was
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fighting with England, not Spain. John Cabot (a.k.a. Giovanni Cabot, another Italian)
"discovered" Newfoundland in England's name around 1497 and paved the way for England's
colonization of most of North America. So the American colonialists instead turned to
Columbus as their hero, not England's Cabot. Hence we have the capital, Washington, D.C. —
that's District of Columbia, not District of Cabot.
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3. Columbus introduced syphilis to Europe.
This is hotly debated. Syphilis was present in pre-Columbus America. Yet syphilis probably
existed for millennia in Europe as well, but simply wasn't well understood. The ancient Greeks
describe lesions rather similar to that from syphilis. Perhaps by coincidence, an outbreak of
syphilis occurred in Naples in 1494 during a French invasion, just two years after Columbus'
return. This sealed the connection.
But aside from descriptions of syphilis-like lesions by Hippocrates, many researchers believe
that there was a syphilis outbreak in, of all places, a 13th-century Augustinian friary in the
English port of Kingston upon Hull. This coastal city saw a continual influx of sailors from
distant lands, and you know what sailors can do. Carbon dating and DNA analysis of bones
from the friary support the theory of syphilis being a worldwide disease before Columbus'
voyages.
4. Columbus died unknown in poverty.
Columbus wasn't a rich man when he died in Spain at age 54 in 1506. But he wasn't
impoverished. He was living comfortably, economically speaking, in an apartment in Valladolid,
Crown of Castile, in present-day Spain, albeit in pain from severe arthritis. Columbus had been
arrested years prior on accusations of tyranny and brutality toward native peoples of the
Americas. But he was released by King Ferdinand after six weeks in prison. He was
subsequently denied most of the profits of his discoveries promised to him by Ferdinand and
Queen Isabella.
After his death, though, his family sued the royal crown, a famous lawsuit known as the Pleitos
colombinos, or Columbian lawsuits, lasting nearly 20 years. Columbus' heirs ultimately secured
significant amounts of property and other riches from the crown. Also, most European
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