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Diego Columbus
Diego Colรณn
Bornbefore 1492
Diedafter 1514
Santo Domingo, Spanish West Indies
Knownย forAdopted son of Christopher Columbus
SpouseCora
ChildrenDiego Colรณn (d. 1506)

Diego Columbus (Spanish: Diego Colรณn, before 1492 โ€“ after 1514) was a Lucayan taken from the island of Guanahani and adopted by Christopher Columbus.

Diego's Lucayan name is unknown, but he was an inhabitant of Guanahani (later San Salvador) in October 1492, when Christopher Columbus made landfall during his first voyage. During the fleet's stay at the island from October 12โ€“14, Columbus abducted seven of the Lucayan inhabitants for use as guides and translators, including the future Diego. Believed to have been 13โ€“15 years of age, he seemingly distinguished himself to Columbus throughout the voyage due to his notable intelligence and rapid acquisition of Spanish customs.

Diego was one of ten Natives[a] taken back to Spain aboard the Niรฑa[b] in January 1493. Arriving at Palos de la Frontera in March, he was taken to and presented to the Royal Court in Barcelona with the other Natives in April. There they became the first Native Americans to be baptized during a ceremony officiated by Cardinal Pedro Gonzรกlez de Mendoza, following which he was adopted by Columbus, receiving the name Diego.

By the time of Columbus' second voyage in 1493, all ten Natives were either sick with or died from contracted disease, with the exception of Diego. Returning with three others to Hispaniola later that year, Diego became Columbus' chief interpreter and played a vital role in discovering the fate of the fort of La Navidad which had been left under the watch of Cacique Guacanagari during the first voyage.

Diego served Columbus faithfully during his remaining time in the Indies, with Columbus negotiating a marriage between Diego and Cora, the sister of Guarionex, another Hispaniolan Cacique. This marriage produced one son, also named Diego, who was later sent to be educated in Castile but died of an illness in 1506.[1]

Confined to Santo Domingo for the remainder of his life, the last record of Diego is dated to 1514. His longtime colleague, Bartolomรฉ de las Casas, claimed to have met with him in the years after.[2]

A deadly smallpox epidemic would sweep Hispaniola in 1519, after which Diego Columbus is no longer listed in official records.[1][2]

In fiction

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Josรฉ Barreiro's The Indian Chronicles consists of a fictionalized memoir written by Diego reflecting on the events of his life.

Notes

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  1. ^ The other nine being two sons of Cacique Guacanagari and another seven Hispaniolans. One would die of illness on the Niรฑa during the return journey, followed by another three in Seville during the journey to Barcelona. Diego was notably the only member of the group spared from illness in Spain.
  2. ^ The Santa Marรญa had been wrecked on a sand bank on December 25.

References

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  1. ^ a b Caballos, Estaban Mira (2004). "Caciques guatiaos en los inicios de la colonizaciรณn: el caso del indio Diego Colรณn" [Guatiao Caciques at the beginning of colonization: the case of the Indian Diego Colรณn]. Iberoamericana (in Spanish). 4 (16): 7โ€“16. JSTORย 41675598.
  2. ^ a b Ostapkowicz, Joanna (2023). Lucayan Legacies: Indigenous lifeways in The Bahamas and Turks and Caicos Islands. Sidestone Press. pp.ย 314โ€“316. ISBNย 978-94-6426-102-8.

๐Ÿ“š Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Christopher Columbus

was a Lucayan from Guanahani thought to be 13โ€“15 years of age, who Columbus adopted as his son upon their arrival in Spain; the boy, whose Lucayan name

Voyages of Christopher Columbus

because of this error. Columbus initially encountered the Lucayan, Taรญno, and Arawak peoples. Noting their gold ear ornaments, Columbus took some of the Arawaks

Inagua

the district council are in Matthew Town. The original settlers were the Lucayan people (Taรญno), who arrived sometime between 500 and 800 CE, crossing in

Taรญno

referred to as Island Arawaks or Antillean Arawaks. Extending from the Lucayan Archipelago of The Bahamas through the Greater Antilles of Cuba, Jamaica

Indigenous peoples of the Caribbean

northern Lesser Antilles and most of the Greater Antilles, including the Lucayans of the Bahamas and the Ciboney of Cuba; the Kalinago of the Lesser Antilles;

Ciboney

century, related that their dialect and culture was similar to that of the Lucayans of the present-day Bahamas. As such, some scholars such as Julian Granberry

North America

be considered either parts of North America or South America. Since the Lucayan Archipelago is located in the Atlantic Ocean rather than Caribbean Sea

Spanish Empire

Leรณn conquered Puerto Rico (1508) and Diego Velรกzquez took Cuba. The Spanish enslaved and deported the entire Lucayan population of the Bahamas by around