Celebrating Christopher Columbus Launching an Age of Discovery
A new genetic study suggests Columbus was a Sephardic Jew from Western Europe.
While Monday is celebrated as the day Christopher Columbus discovered America, he actually spotted the coast of the Bahamas on October 12, 1492.
I thought this might be a great day to recall that his fleet launched an age of discovery, as a nice contrast to the woke, Columbus-as-colonialist pseudo-history offered. This is especially fitting, as it appears SpaceX and its CEO Elon Musk appear to be on the forefront of launching a new age of discovery…in space.
While Lief Erickson might have discovered the continent before Columbus’ voyage, it stayed discovered.
Argentine President Javier Milei has released a video honoring Christopher Columbus for discovering the Americas.
Columbus arrived in the new world on October 12th, 1492.
🇪🇸🇮🇹🇦🇷 pic.twitter.com/GhRH0UmS1n
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) October 12, 2024
Columbus faced many challenges. To begin with, he shopped his proposal around to European courts for years. Finally, Spain’s King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, empowered by their victory over the Muslims, agreed to fund the mission to find shorter and less hazardous trade routes to Asia.
While many people believed the Earth was, indeed, a sphere in 1492, they thought the planet was a bit smaller than it is. Nobody in Europe realized that there were two continents between them and Asia.
Next, the Santa Maria, the Pinta, and the Niña faced storms, becalmed seas, and the crew’s possible unease over sailing off the edge of the world. Furthermore, navigating with the 15th century offered its own challenges, and maps at the time were based on myth and fantasy. Additionally, between the poor hygiene and diet limitations (cruise-ship style buffets were centuries away), the men of those ships deal with scurvy, dysentery, and other illnesses.
Columbus’s discovery of the Americas lifted the entire continent of Europe in terms of quality of life.
The Americas also provided Europe, Asia, and Africa with a rich variety of new foodstuffs. Maize, potatoes, beans, tomatoes, peanuts, tobacco, and cacao (chocolate) were among the plants that journeyed eastward across the Atlantic. By the 1530s, tobacco, smoked and inhaled (in the form of snuff) by Native Americans, became a very valuable cash crop, especially in the British Middle Atlantic colonies. Cacao was used by the Olmec, the Maya civilization, and cultivated in Aztec agriculture. The cacao bean was ground into a powder and infused into water creating a very bitter drink, which was disliked by Europeans.
Hernan Cortés (1485-1547) brought cacao back to Spain in 1528. The Spanish added sugar and honey to alleviate the bitterness, and in the next hundred years, as it spread throughout Europe, vanilla was added to the mixture producing a new luxury item: chocolate.
The potato had the greatest impact on Europe affecting both their diet and lifespan. Potato consists of essential vitamins and nutrients, and it can grow in a wide range of soils capable. Producing high yields, the introduction of potato ended centuries-old cycles of malnourishment and famine, leading to higher population growth in Europe.
Now, let me take a moment to discuss another work of Hernan Cortés: Vanquishing the Aztecs. Social-justice-mythologists usually skip over the magnitude of inhumanity and the sheer scale of horror native Americans imposed upon their fellow human beings.
…In 2015 and 2018, archeologists working at the Templo Mayor excavation site in Mexico City discovered proof of widespread human sacrifice among the Aztecs—none other than the very skull towers and skull racks that conquistadors had described in their accounts.
While it’s true that the Spanish undoubtedly inflated their figures—Spanish historian Fray Diego de Durán reported that 80,400 men, women and children were sacrificed for the inauguration of the Templo Mayor under a previous Aztec emperor—evidence is mounting that the gruesome scenes illustrated in Spanish texts, and preserved in temple murals and stone carvings, are true.
Columbus’ voyages improved navigation techniques and map-making, and pushed the boundaries of what was known about the world. And there were many positive benefits to humanity as well, which go unmentioned in the toxic, revised histories being offered today.
One last thing to note on this Columbus Day: A new genetic study suggests Columbus wasn’t Italian or even originally Catholic but instead a Sephardic Jew.
The findings are based on nearly 22 years’ worth of research that began in 2003, when Lorente, a professor of forensic medicine at Granada University, and historian Marcial Castro exhumed Columbus’ partial remains from the cathedral.
For centuries, countries had argued over his origin, with dozens of conflicting theories that claimed he was born in Poland, Great Britain, Greece, Portugal, Hungary or even Scandinavia.
But those ideas — including the novel thought of a Viking Columbus — appear to have been incorrect.
The DNA-driven results are “almost absolutely reliable,” Lorente said.
The results are consistent with historical records of the era, too, which showed that about 300,000 Jews lived in Spain before Catholic monarchs Isabella and Ferdinand ordered Jews and Muslims to either convert to Catholicism or leave.
Mankind lives to explore, and today is a great day to reflect upon that important trait and to celebrate those who took risks to do so successfully.
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Comments
Take that, indigenous peoples! This is our day!
couple of things – Lief Ericson was BEFORE Columbus (just a typo)
and while Christopher Columbus is the most famous of the explorers, the “father” of the Age of Discovery was a little-known Portuguese King – Henri the Navigator. I only found out about him a few years ago myself.
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as for other beneficial consequences of Columbus. I believe that the curiosity of the new world, the crazy unknowns and endless possibilities of exploration rocked the medieval world of Absolute Truth, as dictated by the Crown(s) and Rome. It started people questioning what they had been taught in ALL areas of their lives, starting with the educated in universities. And from that questioning came the Reformation and the Enlightenment.
Say what you want about the people who followed him to the New World, but in my opinion – and his own – Columbus was led by God.
That you for the catch…much obliged. I will look up more on Henry the Navigator…maybe for next year’s post.
I must admit, I am heartened by how many people are pushing back against “Indigenous Peoples Day” on social media this morning.
Posting from Sint Maarten, discovered by Columbus on his second trip to the New World
Paisan and he still couldn’t find any decent Chinese food.
You need Jews to find a good Chinese restaurant; everyone knows that!
But according to the new discovery, he allegedly was a Jew, and not an Italian, and yet he still didn’t discover Chinese food.
There’s an actual academic paper out there somewhere, I read it back in the early 1990s, explaining how and why Chinese food became so associated with Jews. It happened in the Lower East Side of NYC, and the main reason Jews became so enamored of Chinese food was that they could pretend to themselves that it wasn’t so far from kosher. Chinese food has no dairy products, and the pork is cut up into such small pieces that it’s possible to pretend it’s veal. Whereas the only other foreign cuisine readily available to Lower East Side Jews was Italian, and there was no way to pretend that was kosher.
He also discovered Ohio.
Well, well, well…!
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/columbus-was-sephardic-jew-western-europe-study-finds-rcna175188
The source article is the BBC, so in the age of psy-ops, I’m understandably skeptical. Millions have done the commercial DNA tests for ancestry, and have found surprises in their heritage, so I’m not ruling it out. The BBC does say that this exhaustive forensic study of Columbus determined a Spanish/Jewish mix. What percentage? It doesn’t say. But given the land mass, and centuries of prodigious migration, it is possible. It’s also possible Columbus had no idea about his DNA mix or family heritage from generations ago, and more importantly thought himself a white European of Catholic salvation with no thought to ‘hiding’ his Jewish DNA.
He was Jewish. BBC must have referenced the original source. I looked at it earlier from another secondary article which referred back to the study. He be Yid.
Yeah and Beethoven was black
No, he wasn’t.
Neither was Mozart.
One small nitpick, no mariner in the 1400s worried about sailing off the edge of the earth, all sailors knew since Eratosthenes that the earth was round. They worried about sailing so far and not finding anything, they did not have the provisions to get back home.
Today would be a good day to watch the movie “Apocolypto.”
According to “JustWatch,” its currently streaming free on Amazon Prime, Peacock, and Fubo.
columbus should also be credited with starting the
frequent fliers mileage rewards
even better would be to say that columbus had some african dna
come on
if we allow lefty to control the narrative…………
You have that backwards. People in Columbus’s day knew exactly how big the earth is, and how far it is from Spain to India. Not knowing that there was land on the way, they thought the “lower” hemisphere was a vast ocean, uncrossable with the technology of their time. That’s why they never attempted it.
Columbus was a crackpot, with a crazy theory that the earth is a lot smaller than it really is. Based on his misreading of Marco Polo, he thought Japan was just over the horizon from the Canary Islands, and just a few days’ sailing would get him there. Every educated person correctly mocked him for this, and that’s why he had so much trouble getting funding for the attempt.
They were right and he was wrong, but neither of them knew that a few weeks west of the Canaries lay, not Japan, but a whole new world.
This is commonly claimed nowadays, but the Alhambra Decree of 1492 was not directed at Moslems but only at Jews. Persecution of Moslems in Spain didn’t begin until about ten years later, and they were not officially banned from all of Spain until about 1525.
This is utter hogwash–
One last thing to note on this Columbus Day: A new genetic study suggests Columbus wasn’t Italian or even originally Catholic but instead a Sephardic Jew.
Judaism and Catholicism are belief systems. They do not, no matter how much people might desire such, show in your genes.
Likewise, Spain and Italy are nations, not races. They also leave no genetic imprint.
None of the ‘genetic code’ used in such things is exclusive enough to accurately distinguish boundaries that can be altered by human choice.
Columbus was Italian .because he was born in Italy, in Genoa. It is not part of his genetic code.
He is Catholic because he was confirmed Catholic. This, too,, is not part of his genetic code.
Did he have ancestors who practiced Judaism or lived in Spain? Maybe, but what god and king your ancestors bent the knee to has no bearing on YOU
Leif Erikson Day was October 9th.