1492 -- Christopher Columbus
Christopher
Columbus
Man and Myth
After five centuries, Columbus remains a mysterious and controversial figure who has
been variously described as one of the greatest mariners in history, a visionary genius, a
mystic, a national hero, a failed administrator, a naive entrepreneur, and a ruthless and
greedy imperialist.
Columbus's enterprise to find a westward route to Asia grew out of the practical
experience of a long and varied maritime career, as well as out of his considerable
reading in geographical and theological literature. He settled for a time in Portugal,
where he tried unsuccessfully to enlist support for his project, before moving to Spain.
After many difficulties, through a combination of good luck and persuasiveness, he gained
the support of the Catholic monarchs, Isabel and Fernando.
The widely published report of his voyage of 1492 made Columbus famous throughout
Europe and secured for him the title of Admiral of the Ocean Sea and further royal
patronage. Columbus, who never abandoned the belief that he had reached Asia, led three
more expeditions to the Caribbean. But intrigue and his own administrative failings
brought disappointment and political obscurity to his final years.
In Search and Defense of Privileges
Queen Isabel and King Fernando had agreed to Columbus's lavish demands if he succeeded
on his first voyage: he would be knighted, appointed Admiral of the Ocean Sea, made the
viceroy of any new lands, and awarded ten percent of any new wealth. By 1502, however,
Columbus had every reason to fear for the security of his position. He had been charged
with mal-administration in the Indies.
The Library's vellum copy of the Book of Privileges is one of four that Columbus
commissioned to record his agreements with the Spanish crown. It is unique in preserving
an unofficial transcription of a Papal Bull of September 26, 1493 in which Pope Alexander
VI extended Spain's rights to the New World.
Much concerned with social status, Columbus was granted a coat of arms in 1493. By
1502, he had added several new elements, such as an emerging continent next to islands and
five golden anchors to represent the office of the Admiral of the Sea.
As a reward for his successful voyage of discovery, the Spanish sovereigns granted
Columbus the right to bear arms. According to the blazon specified in letters patent dated
May 20, 1493, Columbus was to bear in the first and the second quarters the royal charges
of Castile and Leon -- the castle and the lion -- but with different tinctures or colors.
In the third quarter would be islands in a wavy sea, and in the fourth, the customary arms
of his family.
The earliest graphic representation of Columbus's arms is found in his Book of
Privileges and shows the significant modifications Columbus ordered by his own
authority. In addition to the royal charges that were authorized in the top quarters,
Columbus adopted the royal colors as well, added a continent among the islands in the
third quarter, and for the fourth quarter borrowed five anchors in fees from the blazon of
the Admiral of Castille. Columbus's bold usurpation of the royal arms, as well as his
choice of additional symbols, help to define his personality and his sense of the
significance of his service to the Spanish monarchs.
The Book of Privileges is a collection of agreements between Columbus and the
crowns of Spain prepared in Seville in 1502 before his 4th final voyage. The compilation
of documents includes the 1497 confirmation of the rights to titles and profits granted to
the Admiral by the 1492 contract of Santa Fe and augmented in 1493 and 1494, as well as
routine instructions and authorizations related to his third voyage. We know that four
copies of his Book of Privileges existed in 1502, three written on vellum and one
on paper.
All three vellum copies have thirty-six documents in common, including the Papal Bull inter
caetera of May 4, 1493, defining the line of demarcation of future Spanish and
Portuguese explorations, and specifically acknowledging Columbus's contributions. The bull
is the first document on vellum in the Library's copy and the thirty-sixth document in the
Genoa and the Paris codices. The Library copy does not have the elaborate rubricated title
page, the vividly colored Columbus coat of arms, or the authenticating notarial signatures
contained in the other copies. The Library's copy, however, does have a unique
transcription of the Papal Bull Dudum siquidem of September 26, 1493, extending the
Spanish donation. The bull is folded and addressed to the Spanish sovereigns.
To learn more about Christopher Columbus and his historic voyage, you might want to
visit 1492: An Ongoing
Voyage, an exhibit of the Library of Congress.
Letter from Christopher Columbus to Lord Raphael Sanchez
Go back to the Knights of Columbus Home Page
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