The Independent - 21 July 2006
http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article1188873.ece

Columbus exposed as iron-fisted tyrant who tortured his slaves

By Graham Keeley in Barcelona

Christopher Columbus was a despot who ruled his subjects with an iron
fist, according to documents which have emerged 500 years after his
death.

The man who discovered America for Europe routinely tortured slaves and
starved his subjects in colonies on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola.

Columbus was known to have mistreated native people when he was viceroy
in Santo Domingo, the capital of today's Dominican Republic, at the end
of the 15th century. But until now it had been put down to his lack of
political sensitivity.

The documents suggest a hidden face to the man who, after arriving in
the Caribbean in 1492, fell from grace eight years later because of his
conduct in Santo Domingo. In 1500, Columbus was brought back from the
city as a prisoner on the orders of the Spanish monarchs, Ferdinand and
Isabella, to stand trial.

Statements from 23 witnesses at his trial were uncovered at the archive
of Simanacas, near Valladolid, by an archivist, Isabel Aguirre, who
spent a year transcribing them.

Consuelo Varela, a historian in Seville, has studied the documents and
believes it is the most important discovery about Columbus's life for a
century. Her research, which appears in La Caida de Cristobal Colon (The
Fall of Christopher Columbus), reveals the brutal life in the first
colony which Columbus set up.

Varela told the Spanish daily El Pais: "Life in the colony in these
first seven years was hard and terrible. There was a great deal of
hunger, envy, rancour and rumours of all sorts. It was a primitive,
insular life, rather like what we see in Western films."She said people,
including white Spanish slaves, were auctioned in the main square of
Santo Domingo. "We hear of a poor boy who was caught stealing wheat
grain. They cut off his ears and nose and put shackles on him and made
him a slave. Columbus ran the colony with an iron fist.

"One woman happened to say that Columbus came from a working-class
family and that his father had been a weaver. Columbus's brother
Bartholme had her tongue cut out, after parading her naked through the
streets on a donkey. Christopher congratulated his brother on defending
the family honour."

There were many attempts at mutiny in the colony, she said.

The 46-page document shows Columbus and his brothers Bartolme and Diego
as tyrants who ruled through summary justice. They also forbade natives
from baptism so they could used as slaves. Varela said the documents
showed Columbus's "immense greed". He was eventually arrested, tried and
dismissed as viceroy of Santo Domingo and governor of the Indies.

"Now we know why he was removed from office and the good reasons for
it," she said. "Nobody likes to air dirty laundry, but this is what the
document shows."

The exposure has already provoked an angry reaction. Critics say some of
the accounts may have come from enemies of Columbus, who were out to
damage his reputation. But other accounts come from members of his own
close group, even trusted friends. "Even they told of the atrocities
that happened," said Varela. "Columbus's government was tyrannical, with
no trials or anything similar."

The revelations come as the world marks the 500th anniversary of
Columbus' death in 1506. DNA investigations on his descendants are under
way in several countries finally to pinpoint the explorer's birthplace,
usually attributed to Genoa in Italy. A result is expected later this
year.

Reply via email to