This Day in Celebrity History
# Christopher Columbus Sets Sail (May 20, 1506) - The Final Curtain On May 20, 1506, one of history's most controversial and consequential figures drew his last breath in Valladolid, Spain. Christopher Columbus, the Genoese explorer who had irrevocably changed the course of human history just fourteen years earlier, died in relative obscurity and disappointing circumstances—a stark contrast to the world-altering impact of his voyages. What makes Columbus's death particularly poignant is how far he had fallen from grace. The man who had been celebrated as the "Admiral of the Ocean Sea" spent his final years embroiled in legal battles, stripped of many honors, and nursing a profound sense of injustice. He was convinced until his dying day that he had reached Asia, never fully grasping that he had stumbled upon continents previously unknown to Europeans. Columbus's final years were marked by poor health, including severe arthritis and ophthalmia that left him partially blind. He spent considerable energy petitioning the Spanish Crown for restoration of his titles and revenues, which had been revoked after complaints about his brutal governance of Hispaniola reached King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella. The man who had promised gold, spices, and converts to Christianity had delivered neither the riches nor the routes to Asia that he had envisioned. The irony of Columbus's death is manifold. He died still believing his greatest discovery was actually just a barrier to his real goal—reaching the Indies. He never knew that two vast continents would eventually bear not his name, but that of another Italian explorer, Amerigo Vespucci, who correctly identified South America as a "New World." At his bedside were his sons Diego and Ferdinand, witnesses to the end of a man who had been both visionary and delusional, brave and brutal. Columbus's last words were reportedly "Into thy hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit"—a final prayer from a man whose religious fervor had been as intense as his ambition. Even in death, Columbus couldn't rest. His remains were moved multiple times—from Valladolid to Seville, then to Santo Domingo, to Havana, and finally back to Seville, creating centuries of confusion and competing claims about where the explorer's bones actually lie. History has been equally restless in its judgment of Columbus. Once celebrated as a heroic discoverer, modern perspectives emphasize the devastating consequences his voyages had for indigenous populations—disease, enslavement, and cultural destruction on an apocalyptic scale. The man who died on May 20, 1506, thinking himself underappreciated, could never have imagined he would become the center of such heated historical debate more than five centuries later. So on this date, we remember not a triumphant hero's passing, but something more human and complex: a driven, flawed man who changed everything while understanding nothing of what he'd truly accomplished—dying disappointed in a Spain that had grown weary of him, never knowing his name would echo through the centuries, for better and for worse. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
645 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de This Day in Celebrity History!