What Is The Letter To Christopher Columbus Santangel

1002 Words3 Pages

In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue. However, even after centuries later, little is truly known of the mysterious voyage and findings of the new world.1 By examining “Letter from Columbus to Luis Santangel”, one can further contextualize the events of Columbus' exploration of the New World. The letter uncovers Columbus' subtle hints of his true intentions and exposes his exaggerated tone that catered to his lavish demands with Spain. Likewise, The Columbian Voyage Map read in accordance with the letter helps the reader track Columbus' first, second, third, and fourth voyage to the New World carefully and conveniently. Thus, the letter and map's rarity and description render invaluable insight into Columbus' intentionality of the New …show more content…

Although the tone of the letter was vastly hyperbolic, Christopher Columbus still managed to document the labeling of the numerous islands and its topography. Yet even the size and measurement is a bit exaggerated as well referring to one island being twice as large as that of Great Britain and Scotland. Columbus did his best to acknowledge various “thousands upon thousands” in this letter with that of spiceries and gold mines with mountains in a “thousand shapes...full of trees of a thousand kinds” as well as deeming the exotic islands incomparable to any other islands that “there could be no believing without seeing” firsthand. Columbus also took thorough note of the natives' rudimentary weapons and technology, which assured the natives' immediate submission to him and his men (that too he was quite careful to note as well). From Spain and Portugal's viewpoint, these published writings were exactly what the Royal Highness' desired to have promulgated. In the letter, Columbus hints that the “innumerable” souls to be conquered from the trip to these islands were to be used only for the service of the Catholic Church: “but they [the natives] all understand each other, which is a thing of singular advantage for what I hope their Highnesses will decide upon for converting them to our holy …show more content…

The positive feedback with almost no mentioning of negative circumstances or even realistic outcome makes the reader question how desperate Columbus may have been in securing a continuous sponsor for his voyages. Therefore, the letter gives the impression as a bias and overtly embellished perspective that was eventually exposed. Nevertheless, Columbus did discover a new world regardless of the letter's exaggeration/intentions. After the letter to Santangel was produced, a copy was made, and from that copy more additional copies came into existence to announce to other countries what Columbus had discovered: “This Latin version [Letter to Santangel] was published in Rome, probably in May, 1493, and this issue was rapidly followed by reprints in Rome, Basel, Paris, and Antwerp....The first German edition of the letter was published in Strassburg in 1947.” Thus, it was because of this letter that copied versions were printed so that the rest of the Latin speaking world beyond the Spanish coast learned of Christopher Columbus's voyage and findings of the New World. Completely convinced that he had indeed found the much-desired Orient, Columbus refused to believe that he had discovered anything other than a route to the spice lands. He was so convinced that he reached the Indies that he in fact refers to the natives as

Open Document