登陆注册
15512500000061

第61章 APPENDIX C.

It would have been so natural to give the name of Columbus to the new world which he gave to Castile and Leon, that much wonder has been expressed that America was not called Columbia, and many efforts have been made to give to the continent this name. The District of Columbia was so named at a time when American writers of poetry, were determined that "Columbia" should be the name of the continent. The ship Columbia, from which the great river of the West takes that name, had received this name under the same circumstances about the same time. The city of Columbia, which is the capital of South Carolina, was named with the same wish to do justice to the great navigator.

Side by side with the discussion as to the name, and sometimes making a part of it, is the question whether Columbus himself was really the first discoverer of the mainland. The reader has seen that he first saw the mainland of South America in the beginning of August, 1498. It was on the fifth, sixth or seventh day, according to Mr. Harrisse's accurate study of the letters. Was this the first discovery by a European of the mainland?

It is known that Ojeda, with whom the reader is familiar, also saw this coast. With him, as passenger on his vessel, was Alberico Vespucci, and at one time it was supposed that Vespucci had made some claim to be the discoverer of the continent, on account of this voyage. But in truth Ojeda himself says that before he sailed he had seen the map of the Gulf of Paria which Columbus had sent home to the sovereigns after he made that discovery. It also seems to be proved that Alberico Vespucci, as he was then called, never made for himself any claim to the great discovery.

Another question, of a certain interest to people proud of English maritime science, is the question whether the Cabots did not see the mainland before Columbus. It is admitted on all hands that they did not make their first voyage till they knew of Columbus's first discoveries; but it is supposed that in the first or second voyage of the Cabots, they saw the mainland of North America. The dates of the Cabots' voyages are unfortunately badly entangled. One of them is as early as 1494, but this is generally rejected. It is more probable that the king's letters patent, authorizing John Cabot and his three sons to go, with five vessels, under the English flag, for the discovery of islands and countries yet unknown," was dated the fifth of March, 1496. Whether, however, they sailed in that year or in the next year is a question. The first record of a discovery is in the account-book of the privy purse of Henry VII, in the words, "August 10th, 1497. To him who discovered the new island, ten pounds." This is clearly not a claim on which the discovery of the mainland can be based.

A manuscript known as the Cotton Manuscript says that John Cabot had sailed, but had not returned, at the moment when the manuscript was written. This period was "the thirteenth year of Henry VII." The thirteenth year of Henry began on the twenty-second of August, 1497, and ended in 1498. On the third of February, 1498, Henry VII granted permission to Cabot to take six English ships "to the lands and islands recently found by the said Cabot, in the name of the king and by his orders." Strictly speaking, this would mean that the mainland had then been discovered; but it is impossible to establish the claim of England on these terms.

What is, however, more to the point, is a letter from Pasqualigo, a Venetian merchant, who says, writing to Venice, on the twenty-third of August, 1497, that Cabot had discovered the mainland at seven hundred leagues to the west, and had sailed along it for a coast of three hundred leagues. He says the voyage was three months in length. It was made, then, between May and August, 1497. The evidence of this letter seems to show that the mainland of North America was really first discovered by Cabot.

The discussion, however, does not in the least detract from the merit due to Columbus for the great discovery. Whether he saw an island or whether he saw the mainland, was a mere matter of what has been called landfall by the seamen. It is admitted on all hands that he was the leader in all these enterprises, and that it was on his success in the first voyage that all such enterprises followed.

同类推荐
  • 八十一难经

    八十一难经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Golden Sayings

    The Golden Sayings

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太平惠民和剂局方

    太平惠民和剂局方

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说师子奋迅菩萨所问经

    佛说师子奋迅菩萨所问经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 谢短篇

    谢短篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 明伦汇编交谊典馈遗部

    明伦汇编交谊典馈遗部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 青丝轮回劫

    青丝轮回劫

    天若不顺,便翻了这天又如何?他若不喜,便强了这人又如何?穿别人的鞋,走自己的路,让别人找去吧!
  • 超越时空的呼唤:时钟少女

    超越时空的呼唤:时钟少女

    一切都已经变了,不只是时间,更多的是一个人!
  • 我在余晖:你看夕阳

    我在余晖:你看夕阳

    我们全在某个雨后站在走廊边上,看着路上的人,看着远处散开的云。那时候我们想的是要快点去更远的地方,把耳朵贴紧世界的胸口像一群单纯的小动物一样。然后彼此离得这么近了,却忘记了要说我喜欢着你啊。记录生活的散文随笔轻小说。我在余晖里,你却在看夕阳。——我在余晖,你看夕阳
  • 魔仇录

    魔仇录

    三千怨仇,三千磨难!魔鬼传承,大杀六界!以吾之名,统领八方!
  • 做个禅女人:女人善待心灵的100个阳光禅

    做个禅女人:女人善待心灵的100个阳光禅

    女人,很多时候都会感到累、感到无助、感到孤单、感到迷茫……”其实在没有月光也没有星光的时候,你也不要绝望和哭泣,禅的智慧会带你走出黑暗和迷雾,走向幸福和光明,让你学会自已送自己一枝鲜花,自己给自己撑一柄避雨的伞,自己给自己一个明媚的笑容。
  • 强行染指:总裁好心急

    强行染指:总裁好心急

    结婚三年不会怀,婆婆骂我是不会下蛋的母鸡。终于怀孕却生了个女孩,老公将我扔在医院里不管不问。逆来顺受只是为了稳定的婚姻,但虐待却变本加厉。终于在那一晚,我躺在酒店的大床上装醉,看着一个不是我老公的男人脱我的衣服。还眯眸浅笑,“是不是第一次玩一夜?”我无法回答,有夫之妇玩一夜,那叫出轨,要在以前,这是要浸猪笼的大罪。他爬起来凑近我,“睡都睡了,现在哭有什么用?难道要我给你办个假的烈女证?”在离婚协议上签字后,他抱着我说,“离婚妇女是个宝,身体丰满经验好。”且看离婚女人如何挣脱束缚,逆袭豪门!
  • 做一个聪明的懒人

    做一个聪明的懒人

    全书分为三个部分:聪明的懒人事业全攻略、聪明的懒人会理财、聪明的懒人生活新主张。
  • 念魚

    念魚

    上善若水,至剛至柔,無所不用其極也。惘惘人生,一個平凡的大學生意外成為了一名念師。讓想法成為現實,藉以渡化眾生,是為念魚。
  • 奥拉星英雄之路

    奥拉星英雄之路

    穿越异界,走向时空。让我们去感受游戏生涯吧。