Italian navigator and explorer who made four voyages to the New World: in 1492 to San Salvador Island, Cuba, and Haiti; from 1493 to 1496 to Guadaloupe, Montserrat, Antigua, Puerto Rico, and Jamaica; in 1498 to Trinidad and the mainland of South America; from 1502 to 1504 to Honduras and Nicaragua.
Believing that Asia could be reached by sailing westwards, he eventually won the support of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain and set off on his first voyage from Palos on 3 August 1492 with three small ships, the
Niña, the
Pinta, and his flagship the
Santa Maria. Land was sighted on 12 October, probably Watling Island (now San Salvador Island), and within a few weeks he reached Cuba and Haiti, returning to Spain in March 1493.
Born in Genoa, Columbus went to sea at an early age, and settled in Portugal in 1478. After his third voyage in 1498, he became involved in quarrels among the colonists sent to Haiti, and in 1500 the governor sent him back to Spain in chains. Released and compensated by the king, he made his last voyage 150204, during which he hoped to find a strait leading to India. He died in poverty in Valladolid and is buried in Seville Cathedral. In 1968 the site of the wreck of the
Santa Maria, sunk off Hispaniola on 25 December 1492, was located.
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