Genoese weaver's son. Survived a pirate sinking by swimming six miles to Portugal. His father-in-law's charts taught him Atlantic currents. Petitioned the Spanish court for seven years, rejected four times, was riding to France on a mule when a messenger caught him: the queen had agreed. October 12, 1492 he landed at San Salvador and on seeing the Taino wrote: "With 50 men we could subjugate them all." Three of four voyages went badly; he was arrested and shipped back in chains. Died at 54 in Valladolid, still convinced he had reached Asia. His body has been moved three times; DNA testing remains inconclusive.
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Born in the Republic of Genoa (modern northern Italy), son of a wool weaver Domenico Colombo. Family poor; he went to sea young, working as a sailor from 12 to 14. Originally Cristoforo Colombo in Italian; Spanish-speaking world calls him Cristóbal Colón; English Christopher Columbus.
熱那亞織工之子,自學航海與星象,等了 7 年才有西班牙國王資助。1492 三船出 Palos、67 天後在 San Salvador 登陸,至死認為到的是亞洲。後三次航海政績不佳、被押回受審、在 Valladolid 貧困而死。但他無意中開啟了歐洲殖民美洲、跨大西洋奴隸貿易與哥倫布交換——人類史最大生態與人口劇變。
Son of a Genoese weaver, self-taught in navigation and astronomy, waited seven years for Spanish royal backing. In 1492 he sailed three ships from Palos; 67 days later he made landfall at San Salvador — and to his death insisted he had reached Asia. Three more voyages went badly; he was arrested and shipped home in chains, and died in poverty at Valladolid. He inadvertently launched European colonization, the transatlantic slave trade, and the Columbian Exchange — the greatest ecological and demographic shift in human history.
佛羅倫斯天文學家 Paolo Toscanelli 寄哥倫布一張西航至「日本/中國」的地圖,附信稱 Atlantic 航程不到 5000 公里。Toscanelli 嚴重低估地球大小——但這正是哥倫布敢於提案西航的數學基礎。
The Florentine astronomer Paolo Toscanelli sent Columbus a westward chart to "Japan/China" with a letter claiming the Atlantic was less than 5,000 km wide. Toscanelli's geography drastically underestimated Earth's circumference — but it was precisely this miscalculation that emboldened Columbus to propose the voyage.
Aboard a Genoese merchant ship to England, he was attacked by Franco-Portuguese pirates and the ship sunk. Columbus grabbed a wooden plank and swam six miles to the Portuguese coast at Lagos. He settled in Lisbon, joined the Portuguese maritime empire's circles, and learned the Atlantic currents.
Married Filipa Moniz Perestrelo of Portuguese nobility. His father-in-law had been an early Madeira colonist and held a trove of nautical charts. From his in-laws' documents Columbus accessed Portugal's most advanced Atlantic charts — and began conceiving a westward voyage to Asia.
哥倫布提出向西航行 4500 公里到亞洲的計畫 (實際距離應是 19000 公里——他算錯地球大小)。葡王 João II 召集學者審查,數學上判定哥倫布錯估,且葡萄牙正集中力量繞非洲 (Diaz 已到好望角),故拒絕。哥倫布喪妻後帶 5 歲兒子 Diego 轉求西班牙。
Columbus proposed a westward voyage of 4,500 km to reach Asia (the real distance was 19,000 km — he had drastically underestimated Earth's size). King João II convened scholars who judged him mathematically wrong, and besides, Portugal was focused on rounding Africa (Diaz had just reached the Cape). Rejected. After his wife died, Columbus took his 5-year-old son Diego and turned to Spain.
For six years he followed Isabella and Ferdinand around Spain. Distracted by the Granada war (the final Reconquista), they gave Columbus only a stipend. Expert commissions rejected his plan four times — wrong distance calculations, exorbitant demands (nobility, governorship, 10% of revenue). After Granada fell in January 1492, Columbus gave up and was riding on a mule toward France when a messenger caught him: the queen had agreed.
4 月 17 日簽 Santa Fé 協議。國王賜哥倫布:「Almirante del Mar Océano (大洋海軍上將)」終身爵位、新發現土地的總督、新土地一切收入的 10%。條件慷慨——但雙方都不知道將發現整個大陸。
On April 17, the Capitulations of Santa Fé were signed. The Crown granted Columbus: the lifetime title "Admiral of the Ocean Sea," governorship of any lands discovered, and 10% of all revenues. Generous terms — neither side knowing they were committing to an entire new continent.
Sailed with three ships — Santa María (flagship), Pinta, Niña — and 90 sailors. After final provisioning at the Canary Islands on September 6, they turned west into uncharted Atlantic waters. Columbus kept a daily log and falsified distances (to keep the crew from panicking).
哥倫布最大航海貢獻不是發現美洲,是發現大西洋風帶系統:去程在低緯度乘東向信風 (trade winds) 西行、返程在中緯度乘西風帶東返。這個 N 字航線後來成為帆船時代橫越大西洋標準路徑、用 400 年。
Columbus's greatest navigational contribution was not finding America but discovering the Atlantic wind system: outward at low latitudes on the easterly trade winds, returning at mid-latitudes on the westerlies. This N-shaped route became the standard transatlantic path of the sailing era — used for 400 years.
Columbus kept two daily logbooks: true mileage for himself, an underreported version (10-25% less) shown to the crew — afraid they would mutiny on realizing how far from Europe they had sailed. The crew caught on faster than he hoped; the deception bought him about three weeks before mutiny nearly broke out anyway.
After five weeks at sea with no land, the crew demanded to turn back in early October — or kill Columbus and throw him overboard. He negotiated: three more days. On the night of October 11, the Pinta's lookout Rodrigo de Triana shouted "Tierra! Tierra!" — Land! Land! — on the final night of the deadline.
登 San Salvador 後立即跪地、感謝上帝,再插上 Castilla 王國旗幟、Aragón 旗幟、十字旗,依「發現法」(Doctrine of Discovery) 宣告該島為西班牙主權。Taino 人在旁圍觀,不知其義。歐洲殖民法律於此一刻誕生於美洲。
After landing on San Salvador, Columbus knelt and thanked God, then planted the banners of Castile, Aragon, and the cross — claiming the island for Spain by right of "discovery" (the Doctrine of Discovery). The Taino watched, not understanding. European colonial law came into being on American soil at that moment.
10 月 12 日上午登上巴哈馬群島一島嶼,命名 San Salvador (聖救主)。原住民 Taino 人 (Lucayan) 友善迎接,贈鸚鵡、棉布。哥倫布在日誌寫:「他們會做好奴隸......50 個士兵就能制服全島。」殖民與奴隸貿易思想當天即現。
On the morning of October 12 he landed on a Bahamian island, naming it San Salvador (Holy Savior). The Taino (Lucayan) inhabitants greeted them peacefully, offering parrots and cotton. Columbus wrote in his log: "They would make fine servants... With 50 men we could subjugate them all." The seeds of colonization and slavery were planted on day one.
After 1492, Europeans brought smallpox, measles, and flu to the Americas, killing 80-95% of indigenous populations—the deadliest cross-continental epidemic.
11 月抵達 Cuba 北岸,誤認為日本 (Cipangu)。派懂阿拉伯語、希伯來語的水手攜西班牙王致中國「大汗」國書深入內陸——找到的是裸身泰諾村莊與煙草。回報「日本人怎麼還是石器時代?」哥倫布認定 Cuba 是亞洲半島,逼船員集體簽約宣誓認可。
In November he reached the north coast of Cuba and identified it as Japan (Cipangu). He dispatched sailors fluent in Arabic and Hebrew, bearing a letter from the Spanish crown to the "Great Khan of China," deep into the interior — they found naked Taino villages and tobacco. Columbus concluded Cuba was an Asian peninsula, and made his entire crew sign sworn statements to that effect.
聖誕夜 (12/24-25),旗艦 Santa María 在 Hispaniola (今海地) 北岸觸礁、無法救起。哥倫布以船骸建第一個歐洲在美洲的殖民據點 La Navidad (聖誕),留 39 人駐守。次年返來時——全部死絕、被當地人殺。
On Christmas Eve, the flagship Santa María ran aground off the north coast of Hispaniola (modern Haiti) and could not be saved. From its timbers Columbus built La Navidad ("Christmas") — the first European settlement in the Americas — and left 39 men to garrison it. When he returned the next year, all 39 were dead — killed by the locals.
In March he returned to the port of Palos. The royals summoned him to Barcelona. He presented gold, parrots, six captive Taino (the first Native Americans displayed in Europe), and cotton. The crown granted him the noble "Don" title and approved a much larger second voyage — 17 ships, 1,500 men.
Departed in September, this time for colonization. Founded La Isabela on Hispaniola, enslaved the Taino for gold mining, imposed forced tribute. The Taino population, perhaps 500,000 in 1492, fell to 100,000 by 1496 — disease, slavery, and massacre combined. Columbus was also denounced by colonists for incompetent tyrannical rule.
Tordesillas 條約·瓜分新世界Treaty of Tordesillas — divides New World
圖:Original: Biblioteca Nacional de Lisboa
Photo: User:Joserebelo · Public domain · Wikimedia CommonsImage: Original: Biblioteca Nacional de Lisboa
Photo: User:Joserebelo · Public domain · Wikimedia Commons
On Hispaniola, Columbus instituted the Encomienda: every Taino man and woman over 14 had to deliver a quota of gold dust every three months. Those who delivered wore a copper token; those who failed had a hand cut off and were sent back to their village as warning. Institutionalized slavery — the template for Spanish colonial tyranny across the Americas.
Encomienda 加上歐洲帶來的天花、麻疹,Taino 人選擇大規模自殺、墮胎、殺嬰免子女受奴役。多明尼加修士 Bartolomé de las Casas 親見、寫下《西印度毀滅簡史》(1542) 揭發暴行——是早期人權文獻。1492 約 50 萬 Taino,1514 已剩 3.2 萬。
Encomienda combined with smallpox and measles brought by the Europeans drove the Taino to mass suicide, abortion, and infanticide to spare children from slavery. The Dominican friar Bartolomé de las Casas witnessed it and wrote A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies (1542) — an early human rights document. From perhaps 500,000 Taino in 1492 only 32,000 remained by 1514.
His third voyage in 1498 reached Trinidad and the Orinoco delta (modern Venezuela). The freshwater discharge was so massive he realized: "This is a new continent" — though he still thought it merely a peninsula off Asia. Meanwhile Hispaniola descended into rebellion; the new royal governor Bobadilla arrested Columbus and shipped him home in chains.
On his third voyage, reaching the mouth of the Orinoco, Columbus saw the enormous freshwater discharge into the sea. He wrote in his journal that this must be "the gate to the Earthly Paradise of Genesis" — and theorized Earth was not a sphere but pear-shaped, with paradise at the bulge he had just touched. The passage shows his deepening late-life mysticism.
Removed from office in Hispaniola by the new royal governor Bobadilla and sent home in chains. The ship's captain offered to remove the irons; Columbus insisted on wearing them all the way to Spain as a sign of injustice. Pardoned by the crown, he nonetheless lost the governorship and most of his revenues.
At over 50, his fourth voyage sought a strait through to "Asia" (actually the Pacific). He explored the Central American coast (modern Honduras to Panama) without finding one. His worm-eaten ships failed; he was marooned on Jamaica for a year. In 1504 a relief ship rescued him; he had intimidated the natives into giving food by accurately predicting a lunar eclipse.
On his fourth voyage, Columbus requested shelter at the port of Santo Domingo on Hispaniola; the new governor Ovando — still resenting him — refused. Columbus warned a hurricane was coming; Ovando dismissed it. Columbus took his four ships into a nearby river mouth and rode it out safely. Ovando's 24-ship treasure fleet sailing for Spain was caught in the open: 20 went down, 500 died — including Columbus's old enemy Bobadilla.
From Jamaica he wrote to the Spanish crown: "I stand alone in this remote and savage place... I have just claim to supplies and have been replaced by strangers. My brothers and sons share my Cyclops-like fate..." An eloquent plea for help. The crown did not reply.
Marooned for a year on Jamaica with food and water cut off by hostile natives, Columbus consulted the German astronomer Regiomontanus's almanac and saw a total lunar eclipse predicted for February 29, 1504. He summoned the chieftains and announced: "God is angry with you for refusing food. He will turn the moon red and take it away." That night the eclipse came — the natives fell to their knees and immediately delivered food.
Buried at Valladolid, then Seville (1509), then Hispaniola (1542), then Havana (1795), then back to Seville (1899) — though portions may still rest in the Santo Domingo Cathedral. 21st-century DNA testing tries to settle the matter; no consensus yet.
5 月 20 日死於 Valladolid,54 歲。臨終仍堅信他發現的是亞洲沿岸島嶼,從未承認那是新大陸。死時並不貧困但已失寵——女王 Isabella 已先他兩年去世,新王 Ferdinand 不再重視他的特權。
Died on May 20 at Valladolid, age 54. To the end he insisted he had reached islands off the Asian coast — never accepted it was a new continent. He was not destitute but had lost royal favor — Queen Isabella had died two years before him, and King Ferdinand no longer honored his privileges.
哥倫布死次年,德國地圖家 Martin Waldseemüller 出版《宇宙誌入門》及世界地圖,把新大陸命名 America——以義大利探險家 Amerigo Vespucci 的拉丁化名字。Vespucci 比哥倫布更早正確認知這是「新大陸」、不是亞洲。歷史諷刺:發現者沒拿到命名權。
The year after Columbus's death, the German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller published Cosmographiae Introductio with a world map naming the new continent "America" — after the Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci, who had correctly recognized it was a new continent, not Asia, before Columbus did. Historical irony: the discoverer did not get the naming rights.
哥倫布次子 Ferdinand (1488-1539, 與情婦 Beatriz 所生) 在父親死後 30 年寫《海軍上將生平》(Historie del Almirante)·為父辯護、塑造英雄形象。後世對哥倫布的浪漫描述多源於此書。Ferdinand 自己藏書 15000 冊,是西班牙首富之一書蟲。
Columbus's second son Ferdinand (1488-1539, by his mistress Beatriz) wrote The Life of the Admiral 30 years after his father's death, defending and heroizing him. Most romantic accounts of Columbus trace back to this book. Ferdinand himself was one of Spain's leading bibliophiles with a library of 15,000 books.
In 1892 Italian-Americans organized celebrations of the 400th anniversary of Columbus's landing. In 1937 President Roosevelt made October 12 a federal holiday — honoring Italian-American contributions and pushing back against anti-Italian prejudice. But from the 1990s indigenous groups protested: for Native Americans this marked the beginning of mass slaughter. Many US states have renamed it "Indigenous Peoples' Day."
2020 喬治佛洛伊德事件後 Black Lives Matter 抗議浪潮中,全美 30 餘座 Columbus 雕像被推倒、斬首、焚燒、扔湖。從 1893 芝加哥世博立的雕像、Boston North End、Baltimore Inner Harbor 到 Richmond Byrd Park 多處受波及。500 年的「英雄發現者」敘事被 21 世紀重審。
During the Black Lives Matter protests of 2020 (after George Floyd), 30+ Columbus statues across the US were toppled, beheaded, burned, or thrown into lakes — from the 1893 Chicago World's Fair statue to Boston's North End, Baltimore's Inner Harbor, and Richmond's Byrd Park. The 500-year-old hero-discoverer narrative was revisited in the 21st century.