When he returned to Spain in the spring of 1493, after making his first voyage to America, Christopher Columbus made this report to his sponsors, King Ferdinand V and Queen Isabella of Spain. Columbus, who some historians regard as boastful and self-serving, gives a glowing description of the islands he discovered: perfect for colonization and rich with gold and other metals. He described the inhabitants as friendly, resourceful, and timid. The king and queen had promised Columbus governorship of lands he discovered and sent him back in the fall with 1500 men and 17 ships. Columbus’s four journeys paved the way to the New World, although he himself always insisted he had explored the East Indies.
Columbus
Announces His Discovery
Christopher
Columbus
1493
Sir:
As I know you will be rejoiced at the glorious success that our
Lord has given me in my voyage, I write this to tell you how in thirty-three
days 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; and of all I have taken possession for their Highnesses by
proclamation and display of the Royal Standard without opposition.
To the first island I discovered I gave the name of San Salvador
[an island in the Bahamas], in commemoration of His Divine Majesty, who has
wonderfully granted all this. The Indians call it Guanaham. The second I named
the Island of Santa Maria de Concepcion; the third, Fernandina; the fourth,
Isabella; the fifth, Juana [Cuba]; and thus to each one I gave a new name. When
I came to Juana, I followed the coast of that isle toward the west and found it
so extensive that I thought it might be the mainland, the province of Cathay;
and as I found no towns nor villages on the sea-coast, except a few small
settlements, where it was impossible to speak to the people, because they fled
at once, I continued the said route, thinking I could not fail to see some
great cities or towns; and finding at the end of many leagues that nothing new
appeared, and that the coast led northward, contrary to my wish, because the
winter had already set in, I decided to make for the south, and as the wind
also was against my proceeding, I determined not to wait there longer, and
turned back to a certain harbor whence I sent two men to find out whether there
was any king or large city. They explored for three days, and found countless
small communities and people, without number, but with no kind of government,
so they returned.
I heard from other Indians I had already taken that this land was
an island, and thus followed the eastern coast for one hundred and seven
leagues, until I came to the end of it. From that point I saw another isle to
the eastward, at eighteen leagues' distance, to which I gave the name of
Hispaniola [Dominican Republic and Haiti]. I went thither and followed its
northern coast to the east, as I had done in Juana, one hundred and
seventy-eight leagues eastward, as in Juana. This island, like all the others,
is most extensive. It has many ports along the sea-coast excelling any in
Christendom—and many fine, large, flowing rivers. The land there is elevated,
with many mountains and peaks incomparably higher than in the centre isle. They
are most beautiful, of a thousand varied forms, accessible, and full of trees
of endless varieties, so high that they seem to touch the sky, and I have been
told that they never lose their foliage. I saw them as green and lovely as
trees are in Spain in the month of May. Some of them were covered with
blossoms, some with fruit, and some in other conditions, according to their
kind. The nightingale and other small birds of a thousand kinds were singing in
the month of November when I was there. There were palm trees of six or eight
varieties, the graceful peculiarities of each one of them being worthy of
admiration as are the other trees, fruits and grasses. There are wonderful pine
woods, and very extensive ranges of meadow land. There is honey, and there are
many kinds of birds, and a great variety of fruits. Inland there are numerous
mines of metals and innumerable people.
Hispaniola is a marvel. Its hills and mountains, fine plains and
open country, are rich and fertile for planting and for pasturage, and for
building towns and villages. The seaports there are incredibly fine, as also
the magnificent rivers, most of which bear gold. The trees, fruits and grasses
differ widely from those in Juana. There are many spices and vast mines of gold
and other metals in this island. They have no iron, nor steel, nor weapons, nor
are they fit for them, because although they are well-made men of commanding
stature, they appear extraordinarily timid. The only arms they have are sticks
of cane, cut when in seed, with a sharpened stick at the end, and they are
afraid to use these. Often I have sent two or three men ashore to some town to
converse with them, and the natives came out in great numbers, and as soon as
they saw our men arrive, fled without a moments delay although I protected them
from all injury.
At every point where I landed, and succeeded in talking to them, I
gave them some of everything I had—cloth and many other things—without
receiving anything in return, but they are a hopelessly timid people. It is
true that since they have gained more confidence and are losing this fear, they
are so unsuspicious and so generous with what they possess, that no one who had
not seen it would believe it. They never refuse anything that is asked for.
They even offer it themselves, and show so much love that they would give their
very hearts. Whether it be anything of great or small value, with any trifle of
whatever kind, they are satisfied. I forbade worthless things being given to
them, such as bits of broken bowls, pieces of glass, and old straps, although they
were as much pleased to get them as if they were the finest jewels in the
world. One sailor was found to have got for a leather strap, gold of the weight
of two and a half castellanos, and others for even more worthless things much
more; while for a new blancas they would give all they had, were it two or
three castellanos of pure gold or an arroba or two of spun cotton. Even bits of
the broken hoops of wine casks they accepted, and gave in return what they had,
like fools, and it seemed wrong to me. I forbade it, and gave a thousand good
and pretty things that I had to win their love, and to induce them to become
Christians and to love and serve their Highnesses and the whole Castilian
nation, and help to get for us things they have in abundance, which are
necessary to us.
They have no religion, nor idolatry, except that they all believe
power and goodness to be in heaven. They firmly believed that I, with my ships
and men, came from heaven and with this idea I have been received everywhere
since they lost fear of me. They are, however, far from being ignorant. They
are most ingenious men, and navigate these seas in a wonderful way, and
describe everything well, but they never before saw people wearing clothes nor
vessels like ours.
Directly I reached the Indies in the first isle I discovered, I
took by force some of the natives, that from them we might gain some
information of what there was in these parts; and so it was that we immediately
understood each other, either by words or signs. They are still with me and
still believe that I come from heaven. They were the first to declare this
wherever I went, and the others ran from house to house, and to the towns
around, crying out, "Come! come! and see the man from heaven!" Then
all, both men and women, as soon as they were reassured about us, came, both
small and great, all bringing something to eat and to drink, which they
presented with marvellous kindness.
In these isles there are a great many canoes, something like
rowing boats, of all sizes, and most of them are larger than an eighteen-oared
galley. They are not so broad, as they are made of a single plank, but a galley
could not keep up with them in rowing, because they go with incredible speed,
and with these they row about among all these islands, which are innumerable,
and carry on their commerce. I have seen some of these canoes with seventy and
eighty men in them, and each had an oar.
In all the islands I observed little difference in the appearance
of the people, or in their habits and language, except that they understand
each other, which is remarkable. Therefore I hope that their Highnesses will
decide upon the conversion of these people to our holy faith, to which they
seem much inclined. I have already stated how I sailed one hundred and seven
leagues along the sea-coast of Juana, in a straight line from west to east. I
can therefore assert that this island is larger than England and Scotland
together, since beyond these one hundred and seven leagues there remained at
the west point two provinces where I did not go, one of which they call Avan,
the home of men with tails. These provinces are computed to be fifty or sixty
leagues in length, as far as can be gathered from the Indians with me, who are
acquainted with all these islands.
This other, Hispaniola, is larger in circumference than all Spain
from Catalonia to Fuentarabia in Biscay, since upon one of its four sides I
sailed one hundred and eighty-eight leagues from west to east. This is worth
having, and must on no account be given up. I have taken possession of all
these islands, for their Highnesses, and all may be more extensive than I know,
or can say, and I hold them for their Highnesses, who can command them as
absolutely as the kingdoms of Castile. In Hispaniola, in the most convenient
place, most accessible for the gold mines and all commerce with the mainland on
this side or with that of the great Khan, on the other, with which there would
be great trade and profit, I have taken possession of a large town, which I
have named the City of Navidad. I began fortifications there which should be
completed by this time, and I have left in it men enough to hold it, with arms,
artillery, and provisions for more than a year; and a boat with a master seaman
skilled in the arts necessary to make others; I am so friendly with the king of
that country that he was proud to call me his brother and hold me as such. Even
should he change his mind and wish to quarrel with my men, neither he nor his
subjects know what arms are, nor wear clothes, as I have said. They are the
most timid people in the world, so that only the men remaining there could
destroy the whole region, and run no risk if they know how to behave themselves
properly.
In all these islands the men seem to be satisfied with one wife,
except they allow as many as twenty to their chief or king. The women appear to
me to work harder than the men, and so far as I can hear they have nothing of
their own, for I think I perceived that what one had others shared, especially
food. In the islands so far, I have found no monsters, as some expected, but,
on the contrary, they are people of very handsome appearance. They are not
black as in Guinea, though their hair is straight and coarse, as it does not
grow where the sun's rays are too ardent. And in truth the sun has extreme
power here, since it is within twenty-six degrees of the equinoctial line. In
these islands there are mountains where the cold this winter was very severe,
but the people endure it from habit, and with the aid of the meat they eat with
very hot spices.
As for monsters, I have found no trace of them except at the point
in the second isle as one enters the Indies, which is inhabited by a people
considered in all the isles as most ferocious, who eat human flesh. They
possess many canoes, with which they overrun all the isles of India stealing
and seizing all they can. They are not worse looking than the others, except
that they wear their hair long like women, and use bows and arrows of the same
cane, with a sharp stick at the end for want of iron, of which they have none.
They are ferocious compared to these other races, who are extremely cowardly;
but I only hear this from the others. They are said to make treaties of
marriage with the women in the first isle to be met with coming from Spain to
the Indies, where there are no men. These women have no feminine occupation,
but use bows and arrows of cane like those before mentioned, and cover and arm
themselves with plates of copper, of which they have a great quantity. Another
island, I am told, is larger than Hispaniola, where the natives have no hair,
and where there is countless gold; and from them all I bring Indians to testify
to this.
To speak, in conclusion, only of what has been done during this
hurried voyage, their Highnesses will see that I can give them as much gold as
they desire if they will give me a little assistance, spices, cotton, as much
as their Highnesses may command to be shipped, and mastic as much as their
Highnesses choose to send for which until now has only been found in Greece, in
the isle of Chios, and the Signoria can get its own price for it; as much
lign-aloe as they command to be shipped, and as many slaves as they choose to
send for, all heathens. I think I have found rhubarb and cinnamon. Many other things
of value will be discovered by the men I left behind me, as I stayed nowhere
when the wind allowed me to pursue my voyage, except in the City of Navidad,
which I left fortified and safe.
Indeed, I might have accomplished much more, had the crews served
me as they ought to have done. The eternal and almighty God, our Lord, it is
Who gives to all who walk in His way, victory over things apparently
impossible, and in this case signally so, because although these lands had been
imagined and talked of before they were seen, most men listened incredulously
to what was thought to be but an idle tale. But our Redeemer has given victory
to our most illustrious King and Queen, and to their kingdoms rendered famous
by this glorious event, at which all Christendom should rejoice, celebrating it
with great festivities and solemn Thanksgivings to the Holy Trinity, with
fervent prayers for the high distinction that will accrue to them from turning
so many peoples to our holy faith; and also from the temporal benefits that not
only Spain but all Christian nations will obtain. Thus I record what has
happened in a brief note written on board the Caravel, off the Canary Isles, on
the 15th of February, 1493.
Yours to command,
THE ADMIRAL[1]
[1]"Columbus Announces His Discovery."Microsoft®
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