I see that Trump stirred up a lot of controversy on the internet today with his praise for Columbus as a hero. So I thought I'd add to the fuss by reprinting my post from four years ago that suggests that Columbus was in fact a Greek, from the island of Chios.
"Reception of Columbus by Ferdinand and Isabella"
I realize I may sound like Gus, the dad in "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" who chauvinistically insists that everything originally came from Greece and Greek culture, but a number of historians do believe that Christopher Columbus was not Italian but came from the Greek island of Chios, specifically the mastic-growing village of Pirgi. (Only on Chios will you find the mastic tree, which produces a resin that has made the people rich since the 14th century. )
"Santa Maria--Flag Ship of Columbus"
This decoration is called ksista (“scraped”
in Greek) or, in Italian, scrafitti. It is believed to have originated in Genoa and spread to
Chios when the island was under Genovese rule—from 1346-1566-- but it’s still
done today in Pirgi.
Here are some of the reasons that historians like Ruth G. Durlacher-Wolper, who wrote "Christophoros Columbus: A Byzantine Prince from Chios, Greece", believe that the discoverer of the Americas was a Greek from Chios.
--He was said to come from Genoa, but the island of Chios was under
Genovese rule from 1346 to1566, so it was part of the Republic of Genoa
during Columbus's time.
--Columbus kept his journals in Latin and Greek--not Italian, which he didn't even speak well.
--He signed his named "Christopher" with the Greek letter X .
--He made notes in Greek in the margins of his favorite book--Imago Mundi, by Cardinal Pierre d'Ailly.
--He referred to himself as "Columbus of the Red Earth" and also wrote
about mastic gum. Chios is noted for its red soil in the south of the
island, which is the only place where mastic grows.
--The name "Columbus" is carved over many doors in the villages of
Pirgi and a priest with that name traces his family on the island back
more than 600 years.
Whatever the truth may be about Columbus's origins, I wanted to
illustrate this Columbus Day blog post with some of the many scenes on a
bed coverlet that I have hanging on a wall near my computer. It was
sewn in redwork (also called "turkeywork") by a woman with the initials
"E M" in 1892 to celebrate the tetracentennial of Columbus's landing.
Whenever I look at it, I wonder at the many hours it must have taken her
to complete this tribute.
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