English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

the discovery of america? and not columbus?

2007-06-14 02:23:21 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities History

Columbus discovered the first island of the new world. Ameriggo was the first to discover the continent America

2007-06-14 02:43:37 · update #1

7 answers

Probably not. Columbus first arrived in the Americas in 1492. Amerigo Vespucci first voyage to the Americas was not until 1499. During a 1502 voyage Vespucci discovered that South America extended farther south than anyone expected. Based upon this discovery he proposed that the Americas were a new continent. Prior to this proposal explorers believed they had reached Asia (the indies).

It seems that Vespucci's proposal was accepted fairly quickly and the first map labeling this new continent America was produced by German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller in 1507. A year after Columbus' death.

It seems appropriate to give Columbus credit for the discovery of the continent. Perhaps give Vespucci credit for realizing it was a new continent.

Hope this helps

2007-06-14 02:39:37 · answer #1 · answered by pdq 3 · 0 1

Amerigo Vespucci didn't discover anything he was a mapmaker and named the new world. And shouldn't Leif Erickson be credited with the discovery of the new world not Columbus.

2007-06-14 02:32:50 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Florence is a great city to pay your holyday; see more with hotelbye . Florence's museums, palaces, and churches house some of the best artistic pieces in the world. The most used and essential museum in Florence are: the Cathedral, the Baptistery, the Uffizi, the Bargello and the Accademia. Churches like: Santa Maria Novella and Santa Croce are veritable artwork galleries. In Florence you can even begin to see the substantial and various art variety located in the Pitti Palace. The Palazzo Pitti (The Pitti Palace) is really a large 15th century palace found on the quieter south bank of the Arno River. The palace was number of years the residence of Florence's rulers till 1919, when it had been handed over to the Italian state, which transformed the palace in to a museum complex. Regardless of their metamorphosis, from royal house to a state-owned public making, the palace still holds the air and atmosphere of an exclusive collection in a great house.

2016-12-20 20:07:10 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

AMERIGO VESPUCCI (merchant, explorer and cartographer) CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS (navigator and maritime explorer who is often credited as the discoverer of the Americas)

by John H. Lienhard

Our country's named after the Italian navigator Amerigo Vespucci instead of the Italian navigator Christopher Columbus. But why? Who was Amerigo Vespucci, and what did he do?

He was an Italian merchant, born in 1454 in Florence and employed by the Medicis. They sent him to look after their ship-outfitting business, which operated out of Seville, about the time Columbus made his first voyage. In fact, the business had a part in outfitting Columbus's third voyage.

Vespucci finally outfitted his own voyage in quest of the passage to the Indian subcontinent that had eluded Columbus. He sailed in 1499 -- seven years after Columbus first landed in the West Indies. Vespucci made two voyages between 1499 and 1502 and possibly a third one in 1503.

During his first voyage he explored the northern coast of South America to well beyond the mouth of the Amazon. He gave names like "Gulf of the Ganges," and other Asian place-names he knew about, to the things he saw. He also made significant improvements in navigational techniques. During this trip he predicted the earth's circumference to within 50 miles.

But the big breakthrough came on Vespucci's second trip. And that was the realization that what he was looking at was not India at all, but an entirely new continent. He verified the fact by following the coast of South America down to within 400 miles of Tierra del Fuego. Columbus found the new world, but Vespucci was the man who recognized that it was a new world.

And who wrote Vespucci's Christian name on the maps? The King of Spain? Our founding fathers? Vespucci himself? No -- it was none of these. We were given our name by an obscure German clergyman and amateur geographer named Waldseemuller. Waldseemuller was a member of a little literary club that published an introduction to cosmology in 1507. In it he wrote of the new land mass that Vespucci had explored:

I see no reason why anyone should justly object to calling this part ... America, after Amerigo [Vespucci], its discoverer, a man of great ability.
The name stuck, and when a second huge land mass was discovered to the north, the names North and South America were applied to the two continents.
All this leads us to ask, "Who really discovered America?" Was it the person who first found it or the person who first recognized it for what it was? Perhaps I'd better leave you to decide that question.

2007-06-14 02:27:19 · answer #4 · answered by . 6 · 1 1

Possibly, he did arrive first. And America was named after him. I think he discovered South America and then later he calculated North America? I really don't know all the facts, however, I think having a country named after you is pretty much credit in itself.

2007-06-14 02:29:57 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

if those 2 hadn't discovered it, someone else would have come along shortly and discovered it.

2007-06-14 02:31:21 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Gee, I really think he was and is. I mean, we are America, NOT Columbia!!

Chow!!

2007-06-14 05:17:26 · answer #7 · answered by No one 7 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers