http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article1927125.ece


Portuguese village opens up new world of speculation as it lays claim to 
Columbus 
By Elizabeth Nash in Madrid 
Published: 25 October 2006 
Christopher Columbus was born in Cuba - at least that's what they say in the 
village of that name south-east of Lisbon in the heart of Portugal's Alentejo 
region. Portugal's first statue of the explorer is to be unveiled in Cuba's 
central square on Saturday, the 514th anniversary of Columbus's landfall on the 
Caribbean island later named after his supposed birthplace. 

The 7ft bronze monument, showing the Admiralbestriding the globe, rolled map in 
one hand, shading his eyes with the other, will stand upon a granite pedestal 
facing Cuba's ancient palace of Duke Fernando of Beja, of whom, so the theory 
goes, Cristovao Colom was the illegitimate son.

The ceremony, to be attended by Portugal's Culture Minister, Isabel Pires de 
Lima, will strengthen the arguments of Portuguese historians that the voyager 
who first set foot in the Americas was neither Genoese, as is generally 
thought, nor Catalan - as a counter lobby insists - but Portuguese, of mixed 
noble and Jewish blood.

The mystery of why Columbus apparently covered up his Portuguese roots - even 
though he spoke the language fluently - is explained by the possibility that he 
was secretly working as a double agent for the Portuguese King Joao II, while 
accepting riches to fund his transatlantic voyages of discovery from Queen 
Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain - Portugal's bitterest rivals in the 
conquest of America.

Cuban locals recall hearing tales dating from the early 1900s that he was 
baptised in the village church. But the first serious research was published by 
the Portuguese historian Mascarenas Barreto in his 1988 book, Cristovao Colom, 
agente secreto do rei Dom Joao II. Barreto hypothesised that the explorer was 
really Salvador Fernandez Zarco, who assumed the pseudonym Cristovao Colom to 
present himself to the Spanish royal court.

A year after Barreto published his study, a US scholar Manuel Luciano de Silva 
joined the trail. How, the two historians asked, could a man said to have come 
from a humble family of Genoese weavers move in courtly circles, and marry a 
noblewoman? Why did a young Genoese who left his home town at 24 express 
himself only in Spanish, or Portuguese, even when writing to his Genoese 
friends? Why did he name none of his discoveries in the New World after Italian 
places, whilst peppering the region with Portuguese place names like Veracruz, 
Santo Domingo - and Cuba?

Salvador Fernandez Zarco was the son of Isabel Gonsalves Zarco, daughter of the 
Jewish Portuguese navigator Joao Gonsalves Zarco, the discoverer of the 
Atlantic island of Porto Santo, near Madeira. Dom Fernando Duque de Beja had an 
illegitimate son with Isabel. She gave birth to Salvador at the duke's palace 
in Cuba - 12km north of the town of Beja - in 1448. When the boy was six he 
travelled with her to Porto Santo, and at 14 began his career as a seaman and 
navigator.

Christopher Columbus married Filipa Perestrello e Moniz, the daughter of 
Madeira's governor, in 1479 - an achievement Portuguese historians consider 
impossible unless he was himself of noble birth - and she bore his first son, 
Diego.

Da Silva and Barreto reckon Columbus never revealed his true identity because 
the Duke of Beja was a mortal enemy of King Joao II, who had ordered Fernando's 
assassination. This apparently explains why the duke's natural son Columbus 
hastened to Spain, and refused King Joao's written invitation to return, in a 
letter guaranteeing that Columbus would suffer no harm.

Historians point to the curious fact that when Columbus returned from his first 
voyage of discovery he landed first in Lisbon and, armed with that letter, 
sought an audience with "his" king.

He spent a week in the Portuguese royal palace before sailing to Spain to 
report to the monarchs of the discoveries that they had financed.

The Portuguese historian Joaquin Verissimo believes Columbus secretly served 
the monarchs of both Spain and Portugal.

Today's claimant to the Portuguese throne, Dom Duarte de Braganza, direct 
descendent of Duke Fernando, has donated a blood sample to the Spanish and 
Portuguese governments in the hope his DNA can be matched with that of Columbus 
or his descendants.

Who was Columbus?

Spaniards call him Cristobal Colon, Italians Cristoforo Colombo, Catalans 
Cristofol Colom. Whatever his real name, the explorer who sailed the ocean blue 
to discover America in 1492 was either Catalan, Spanish or Portuguese depending 
on which rival historian you ask.

Usually said to have been born of a humble family in Genoa in 1451, he made 
three more journeys after his first, momentous voyage, all funded by the 
Spanish crown, still believing he had reached Asia.

He opened the door to Spain's conquest of the Americas. He died on 20 May 1506 
in Valladolid, Spain. His remains were taken to Seville's Carthusian monastery, 
then to the cathedral of Santo Domingo, at the request of his son Diego. They 
were later removed to Havana and, possibly, returned to Seville.

Only DNA testing can prove his origins and which bones in various graves are 
his. 

Christopher Columbus was born in Cuba - at least that's what they say in the 
village of that name south-east of Lisbon in the heart of Portugal's Alentejo 
region. Portugal's first statue of the explorer is to be unveiled in Cuba's 
central square on Saturday, the 514th anniversary of Columbus's landfall on the 
Caribbean island later named after his supposed birthplace. 

The 7ft bronze monument, showing the Admiralbestriding the globe, rolled map in 
one hand, shading his eyes with the other, will stand upon a granite pedestal 
facing Cuba's ancient palace of Duke Fernando of Beja, of whom, so the theory 
goes, Cristovao Colom was the illegitimate son.

The ceremony, to be attended by Portugal's Culture Minister, Isabel Pires de 
Lima, will strengthen the arguments of Portuguese historians that the voyager 
who first set foot in the Americas was neither Genoese, as is generally 
thought, nor Catalan - as a counter lobby insists - but Portuguese, of mixed 
noble and Jewish blood.

The mystery of why Columbus apparently covered up his Portuguese roots - even 
though he spoke the language fluently - is explained by the possibility that he 
was secretly working as a double agent for the Portuguese King Joao II, while 
accepting riches to fund his transatlantic voyages of discovery from Queen 
Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain - Portugal's bitterest rivals in the 
conquest of America.

Cuban locals recall hearing tales dating from the early 1900s that he was 
baptised in the village church. But the first serious research was published by 
the Portuguese historian Mascarenas Barreto in his 1988 book, Cristovao Colom, 
agente secreto do rei Dom Joao II. Barreto hypothesised that the explorer was 
really Salvador Fernandez Zarco, who assumed the pseudonym Cristovao Colom to 
present himself to the Spanish royal court.

A year after Barreto published his study, a US scholar Manuel Luciano de Silva 
joined the trail. How, the two historians asked, could a man said to have come 
from a humble family of Genoese weavers move in courtly circles, and marry a 
noblewoman? Why did a young Genoese who left his home town at 24 express 
himself only in Spanish, or Portuguese, even when writing to his Genoese 
friends? Why did he name none of his discoveries in the New World after Italian 
places, whilst peppering the region with Portuguese place names like Veracruz, 
Santo Domingo - and Cuba?

Salvador Fernandez Zarco was the son of Isabel Gonsalves Zarco, daughter of the 
Jewish Portuguese navigator Joao Gonsalves Zarco, the discoverer of the 
Atlantic island of Porto Santo, near Madeira. Dom Fernando Duque de Beja had an 
illegitimate son with Isabel. She gave birth to Salvador at the duke's palace 
in Cuba - 12km north of the town of Beja - in 1448. When the boy was six he 
travelled with her to Porto Santo, and at 14 began his career as a seaman and 
navigator.

Christopher Columbus married Filipa Perestrello e Moniz, the daughter of 
Madeira's governor, in 1479 - an achievement Portuguese historians consider 
impossible unless he was himself of noble birth - and she bore his first son, 
Diego.

Da Silva and Barreto reckon Columbus never revealed his true identity because 
the Duke of Beja was a mortal enemy of King Joao II, who had ordered Fernando's 
assassination. This apparently explains why the duke's natural son Columbus 
hastened to Spain, and refused King Joao's written invitation to return, in a 
letter guaranteeing that Columbus would suffer no harm.

Historians point to the curious fact that when Columbus returned from his first 
voyage of discovery he landed first in Lisbon and, armed with that letter, 
sought an audience with "his" king.

He spent a week in the Portuguese royal palace before sailing to Spain to 
report to the monarchs of the discoveries that they had financed.

The Portuguese historian Joaquin Verissimo believes Columbus secretly served 
the monarchs of both Spain and Portugal.

Today's claimant to the Portuguese throne, Dom Duarte de Braganza, direct 
descendent of Duke Fernando, has donated a blood sample to the Spanish and 
Portuguese governments in the hope his DNA can be matched with that of Columbus 
or his descendants.

Who was Columbus?

Spaniards call him Cristobal Colon, Italians Cristoforo Colombo, Catalans 
Cristofol Colom. Whatever his real name, the explorer who sailed the ocean blue 
to discover America in 1492 was either Catalan, Spanish or Portuguese depending 
on which rival historian you ask.

Usually said to have been born of a humble family in Genoa in 1451, he made 
three more journeys after his first, momentous voyage, all funded by the 
Spanish crown, still believing he had reached Asia.

He opened the door to Spain's conquest of the Americas. He died on 20 May 1506 
in Valladolid, Spain. His remains were taken to Seville's Carthusian monastery, 
then to the cathedral of Santo Domingo, at the request of his son Diego. They 
were later removed to Havana and, possibly, returned to Seville.

Only DNA testing can prove his origins and which bones in various graves are 
his. 


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