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{{Infobox person|name=Christopher Columbus|native_name=Cristoffa Corombo<br>Cristóbal Colón|birth_place=Genoa, [[Republic of Genoa]]|death_date=20 May 1506|death_place=Valladolid, [[Crown of Castile (1230–1715)|Castile]]|birth_date=1451|known=Beginning the invasion of the Americas|image=Christopher Columbus image.jpg|caption=Portrait of Columbus from after his death}}
{{Infobox person|name=Christopher Columbus|native_name=Cristoffa Corombo<br>Cristóbal Colón|birth_place=Genoa, [[Republic of Genoa]]|death_date=20 May 1506 (aged 54)|death_place=Valladolid, [[Crown of Castile (1230–1715)|Castile]]|birth_date=1451|known=Beginning the invasion of the Americas|image=Christopher Columbus image.jpg|caption=Portrait of Columbus from after his death}}


'''Christopher Columbus''' was a Genoese sailor who began the European colonization of the [[Americas]] and [[genocide]] of its indigenous peoples.
'''Christopher Columbus''' was a Genoese sailor who began the European colonization of the [[Americas]] and [[genocide]] of its indigenous peoples.

Revision as of 15:02, 7 May 2023

Christopher Columbus

Cristoffa Corombo
Cristóbal Colón
Portrait of Columbus from after his death
Born1451
Genoa, Republic of Genoa
Died20 May 1506 (aged 54)
Valladolid, Castile
Known forBeginning the invasion of the Americas


Christopher Columbus was a Genoese sailor who began the European colonization of the Americas and genocide of its indigenous peoples.

Genocide of indigenous peoples

Columbus sailed from Spain to what is now the Bahamas in 1492 with support from the Spanish monarchy. He enslaved the Arawak people in the Bahamas and Hispaniola (now Haiti and the Dominican Republic) and forced them to mine gold. If they could not find enough gold, he cut their hands off. Columbus sent about 5,000 enslaved Arawaks to Europe. When the gold supply ran out, the Spanish began a system of plantation slavery. From 1492 to 1516, the Arawak population dropped from eight million to 12,000. The Spanish had completely wiped out the Arawaks in Hispaniola by 1555.[1]

References

  1. "The real legacy of Christopher Columbus: slavery and genocide" (2014-07-03). Liberation School. Archived from the original on 2022-05-25. Retrieved 2022-08-28.