『Amerigo Vespucci vs Columbus Who Really Discovered America』のカバーアート

Amerigo Vespucci vs Columbus Who Really Discovered America

Amerigo Vespucci vs Columbus Who Really Discovered America

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The name "America" is everywhere, but the man who got the credit never actually led his own expedition. So why is the New World named after Amerigo Vespucci and not Christopher Columbus? The answer lies not in who got there first, but in who first understood what they had actually found.
In this episode, we unravel one of history's most persistent questions. We explore how Columbus's four voyages, beginning in 1492, made landfall in the Caribbean but never wavered from his belief that he had reached the eastern edges of Asia. Meanwhile, Vespucci, a Florentine merchant and navigator, sailed along the coast of South America and concluded that this land was not Asia at all—it was a completely new and separate continent [citation:1][citation:10]. His published letters introduced Europe to the concept of a *Mundus Novus* ("New World") [citation:1][citation:7]. Although modern scholars have concluded that Vespucci's claims of a 1497 voyage were likely fabricated, his real achievement was the revolutionary idea of the New World as a distinct landmass. When a German cartographer published a map naming this new continent "America" in his honor in 1507 [citation:4][citation:15], the name—like the idea itself—stuck. Subscribe and hit the bell for more episodes that separate fact from fiction in the Age of Discovery.
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