Christopher Columbus's 1492 voyage, intended to reach Asia, resulted in the accidental discovery of the Americas when he landed on San Salvador Island and encountered the Arawak people; despite finding no gold and believing he had reached Cipango (Japan) or Cathay (China), Columbus's determination to return with more troops and ships ignited the Age of Exploration, permanently connecting two previously isolated hemispheres.
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History of the United States of America S01E03 | Columbus discovers Americ #history追加:
Let's dive into Columbus' 1492 voyage.
It's literally history's biggest case of mistaken identity. He expected to find the wealthy courts of Asia, but sailed right into totally unknown waters. By October 1492, this Genoese navigator genuinely thought he was just days away from Asia. And he took on this massive uncharted ocean with just three remarkably small ships.
He was totally wrong. But that single navigational blunder permanently rewired human history forever.
Well, after weeks of endless water, October 12th finally brought land.
Stepping onto an island he named San Salvador, Columbus crashed two totally unprepared worlds together. He met the native Arawak people. He actually described them as curious, generous, and peaceful. Expecting grand overflowing treasures of gold, yeah, he instead found locals wearing small decorative nose rings.
Driven by an obsession with gold, he frantically island-hopped from San Salvador to Cuba and Hispaniola. But those golden Asian cities he promised the Spanish crown, they were completely missing.
Being deeply religious, Columbus actually searched his Bible and convinced himself Hispaniola was the biblical Sheba. He desperately needed gold, but he was really just surviving on blind faith and wishful thinking.
Refusing to accept failure, he sailed back to Spain fueled by just complete unshakable determination.
His cargo? Exotic parrots, captive Arawak people, and lofty promises of unimaginable wealth to come. But his appetite wasn't satisfied. He immediately plotted a massive return with more soldiers and ships. That single, highly flawed voyage ignited the Age of Exploration, permanently connecting two isolated hemispheres. So, it leaves us wondering, how did one guy's geographic mis
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