Sunday, March 8, 2020
Who Was Columbus essays
Who Was Columbus essays    Christopher Columbus may have "Sailed the Ocean Blue in 1492," over 500     years ago, but only in recent years have books been written about the     explorer that cover any new territory (pun intended) concerning personal     information on this explorer.  For the most part, he has remained a remote     figure without much depth and understanding. As Carla Phillips and William     Phillips said in Christopher Columbus in United States History:  Biography     as Projection, "His exploits have assumed mythic proportions, but there has     been little attempt to probe beyond the myth." In fact, of the hundreds of     books written on Columbus, nearly all are positive and many of them rehash     the same information that has been in textbooks for decades and decades.           In another one of their books, The Worlds of Christopher Columbus,     the Phillips historian team adds that it was really not until the fourth     centenary that "Columbus's life found its  first great American debunker,"     through the writings of Justin Winsor. Instead of trying to cut down     Columbus through religious prejudice, slanted information or character     defamation, Winsor based his information on the documentary record and     unbiased scholarship. He noted that Columbus was everything from a bad     administrator to profiteer hoping to gain from the slave trade.           One of the difficulties with a thorough study of Columbus is that     much of the information about him comes from his own writings. Because of     his strong ego, it comes as no surprise that Columbus only shows his good     side in his log. He also probably thought of the important heritage his     writings would leave to future generations. As the Phillips say, "Columbus     had a strong sense of his own worth, rarely admitting any personal failings     and tending to blame any and all misfortunes on the actions of others." In     fact, in a flourish of pretentious mysticism, Columbus adopted the name    ...     
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