Columbus Letter To King Ferdinand And Queen Isabella

503 Words2 Pages

Columbus voyage.

After King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella agreed to finance Columbus voyage, he sailed west, searching for a new route to trade with India. In his voyage, he stumbled upon new lands in the caribbean. Columbus described the land as full of riches, and the natives as weak, timid and could be easily converted.Columbus’s letter to the king and queen was only a sales pitch to prove that the investment of the king was a success. Columbus reclaimed the land in the name of his king, which later on led to a series of Spanish conquests in the new world. De Las Casas, a priest who wrote an account about the outcome of these series of Spanish conquests. He described the ruthless exploitations and the violence acts that were carried out with no cause. This paper will focus on Columbus letter to King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella. How religious conversion was the justification of the conquest. in addition to De Las account about the colonial instruments that were used to subdue the natives and to impose the feudal system of Spain onto the Natives to turn the natives into Spaniards. …show more content…

He also reclaimed the land and its people to the king assuming that Spain has the right to take all possessions. Thus, leading the king to make new investments, by giving Columbus more ships and men in the process. Moreover, Columbus called the natives as timid and he captured some in his voyage bringing them to Spain to illustrate his portray.

Religious conversion of the indigenous people was the justification and goal of the conquest. Such an idea of religious conversion was an overwhelming achievement for a king, to be known as the spreader of Christianity into the new world.Furthermore, Religious conversion was achieved in the first few decades after the

Open Document