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Did Portugal do anything to harm him in any way? What did Spain do to Columbus after he returned from the new worlds?

2007-12-05 16:06:10 · 8 answers · asked by harmeek_sangha 1 in Arts & Humanities History

Who put him in inprisonment and why?

2007-12-05 16:28:57 · update #1

Columbus sought a royal sponsorship for a voyage to prove his ideas. The Portuguese court had declined his proposal, partly out of skepticism about his geography and partly because Dias’s voyage of 1488 already pointed to India. What does that mean???

2007-12-05 16:56:40 · update #2

8 answers

The fact that Columbus on returning from his first voyage not only stopped in Portugal but stayed there almost a week (first in the Azores, then in Lisbon where he was given a personal meeting with the portuguese king, then one of the most powerful people on earth, then he went to Santarém and after he went to meet the queen (!) in a private hearing and finallyhe stopped in the southern city of Lagos before finally heading to Spain...) before sailing to Seville is one of the many strange things about Columbus and stirs many doubts and suspicions that:

- either he intended to betray Spain and offer the islands to Portugal.

or

- he was a portuguese secret agent, by leading the spanish to the new world the portuguese were to be left alone with their route to India around Africa, allready discovered by the portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias in 1488 (it was later to be the one, real, fastest and most lucrative sailing route in History and was controlled by the portuguese for almost 200 years).
In recent years, many historians tend to believe in the second hypothesis.

The fact is that the spanish didn't get a profit out of the new world until decades later (something many people don't know or realize) and in the meanwhile the portuguese established a true Empire, controling all of Africa, Brazil, India, China, India and Japan trade.
Comparably the importance of the portuguese history is much more relevant but the way history is taught in the US leads people to believe the spanish were more influential when it was not the case, they just had north, central and south-american except Brazil that is more than 2/3 of south-america.

So yes, columbus was strangely very well welcomed by the portuguese...

and

the portuguese officially refused columbus proposal because in 1488 they had allready discovered the sea route to India, what Columbus was trying to find, suposedly...

Some years later Columbus was indeed arrested by the spanish in his 4th voyage and put to prison, mainly, or supposedly, because he wanted too much power and control over the new lands but especially because the spanish kings weren't making one cent from the new world, exactly zero, they had no gold, no spices, no nothing. Not until the 1520's, when the spanish explorers reached the Inca Empire and their gold, but this was almost 30 YEARS after Columbus discovery...

2007-12-06 11:05:02 · answer #1 · answered by Heterónimo 7 · 0 0

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2016-12-20 16:04:50 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Economists have recognised for some time that there are four economies within the eurozone which may need to be bailed out, they are Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Spain (sometimes referred to as PIGS) So far, Greece and Ireland have recieved EU bailouts this year. The Spanish economy is bigger than that of Portugal, Ireland and Greece combined so its sheer size would make a Greece style bailout impossible causing a crisis in the eurozone that the Euro itself probably won't survive as a single currency.

2016-04-07 21:01:50 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

On returning from the New World after his first voyage, Columbus was in the harbor of Lisbon, Portugal for several days while he laid on provisions. No, no attempt on his life.

He posted a letter from Lisbon to a valued friend. Copies of it still exist. I read a translation 15 years ago.

2007-12-05 16:35:39 · answer #4 · answered by loryntoo 7 · 1 0

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2016-12-19 23:06:27 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not after the first voyage when everyone thought he was pretty neat, but after his third voyage he was returned in chains and imprisoned. I think because the promised riches had not materialized. At that point no one realized the treasure he had found.

2007-12-05 16:11:26 · answer #6 · answered by LodiTX 6 · 1 1

No, but according to one source, he was in league with the Protuguese concerning New World lands.

2007-12-06 02:30:17 · answer #7 · answered by zebbie g 2 · 1 1

NEW WORLD

NEW LAND

NEW GOLD

NEW SILVER

NEW WORLD MEETS THE OLD WORLD.

2016-10-28 16:09:00 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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