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Christopher Columbus: Journal and Selected Writings Background

Christopher Columbus kept journals of his voyages primarily to convince King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella to continue funding further exploratory voyages to the New World. The journals lack precise scientific observations and details needed to create maps, instead reading more like an investment prospectus describing exciting discoveries worth further exploration. Understanding that Columbus' main purpose was securing additional funding provides crucial context for properly interpreting his journals as promotional accounts aimed at maintaining royal patronage, rather than as objective records of discovery.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
81 views1 page

Christopher Columbus: Journal and Selected Writings Background

Christopher Columbus kept journals of his voyages primarily to convince King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella to continue funding further exploratory voyages to the New World. The journals lack precise scientific observations and details needed to create maps, instead reading more like an investment prospectus describing exciting discoveries worth further exploration. Understanding that Columbus' main purpose was securing additional funding provides crucial context for properly interpreting his journals as promotional accounts aimed at maintaining royal patronage, rather than as objective records of discovery.

Uploaded by

Chae
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Christopher Columbus: Journal and Selected Writings

Background
These notes were contributed by members of the GradeSaver community. We are thankful for their
contributions and encourage you to make your own.

Written by Timothy Sexton

Journals are commenced for a number of reasons. Sometimes they are begun as diaries which
offer a psychological trail into self-reflection and a more intuitive level of self-awareness. Other
journals offer the opportunity to write down immediate artistic inspiration for use later when the
creative moment has arrived. Understanding the purpose of a journal should be considered
essential for the purpose of interpretation: authorial intent fuels proper interpretation. A proper
interpretation of the journal of Christopher Columbus is therefore dependent upon recognizing
that primary, overriding purpose of the journal was to convince King Ferdinand and Queen
Isabella to continue funding subsequent exploratory voyages to the New World.

The historical context within which these journals were written included a two-year period of
waiting merely to gain an audience with Ferdinand and Isabella to pitch his idea for the first
voyage. That first voyage would not set sail for another six years after he finally got his audience
with the monarchs. In consideration of the time and effort required to get that first voyage
underway, the content of journals created and maintained specifically for the purpose of keeping
the enterprise going can take on a completely different perspective than when looked at merely
as objective observation of an exploratory nature.

The nature of the content of writings of Columbus take on a sharper clarity when read with the
understanding of its purpose. The precision of scientific observance is routinely absent. The
journals are not accounts of discovery of foreign landscapes and even a mapmaker would be at a
loss to create anything particularly detailed. The journal kept by the arguably the most famous
and influential explorer in history actually reads far less like any other account by famous
explorers and far more like something quite modern.

The journals and many of the other writings which act as commentary upon the journal often
read more like an investment prospectus. The overarching concern is the documentation of what
is to be found in the New World that offer something exciting, new, fresh and worthy of the kind
of curiosity that provokes continued interest in further exploration in order to discover even
newer things worthy of even greater curiosity. The journals are thus an account what exists in
unconquered lands that would be value for further study.

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