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nTheren is a myth that Christopher Columbus went up against the people ofn his day, claiming that the world was round when “everybody knew”n that the world was flat. The myth goes on that Columbus was provedn right – the underdog wins the day!
There is another mythn that Christopher Columbus was incredibly stupid and wrong-headedn about the world. According to this myth, everyone knew that then world was round like an orange, and learned people agreed that itn was really, really huge. According to this story, everybody knewn that sailing across the Atlantic Ocean to China and “the Indies”n was impossible, at least at that time – the distance was too far.n According to this myth, Columbus stubbornly argued that the worldn was way smaller than it is – and he was just plain lucky to runn into islands and continents conveniently located a sail-ablen distance from Europe.
The reality was that experts, scholars,n and navigators in the late 1400s all agreed that the world wasn roundish (if you want to see how even ancient scholars knew that,n check out
this article),n but they disagreed about its size and shape, and they of coursen didn’t know how much of the Earth was covered by land and how muchn by oceans. Columbus thought it likely that the Earth was smallern than it is, and that it was shaped more like a pear than an orange.n But he was hardly alone in these thoughts – he wasn’t someone whon held onto a stubborn disbelief of well-established knowledge. An mathematician named Paolo Toscanelli, from Florence (now Italy),n thought that Asia could be reached by sailing west – and Columbusn corresponded with him. A globe made by Martin Behaim showed Asian extending much farther east than it really does, and the Atlanticn islands including the Canary Islands extending much farther westn than they really do; even the great (and ancient) thinker Ptolemyn thought that Eurasia is much larger than it is.n
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nYoun may have read that, even though Magellan is often given credit forn being the first person to circumnavigate the globe, he didn’t do it.n He was killed in what we now call the Philippines, before hisn mission even reached “Spice Islands” (today called Indonesia).
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nMagellan deserves some partial credit, since he organizedn the voyage, navigated the dangerous, stormy straits that bear hisn name around the tip of South America, and also navigated a 98-dayn journey across the Pacific before reaching habitable land…but twon others also deserve credit:
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nThe Basque mariner Juan Sebastiann Elcano commanded the return voyage of Victoria,n which was the only surviving ship out of the five that started.
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A statue of Enrique, aka Henrique |
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nWhatn is the difference between the Pilgrims of Plymouth, MA, and then Puritans of Salem, MA?
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Checknout my Pinterest boards for:
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n Septembern holidays
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n Septembern birthdays
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nn Historicaln anniversaries in September
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