Wreckage found: May be Columbus’ sunken flagship
The leader of an undersea expedition says a pile of wreckage on the bottom of the Caribbean Sea, off the north coast of Haiti, may well mark the spot where Christopher Columbus’ flagship, the Santa Maria, sank in 1492.
“All the geographical, underwater topography and archaeological evidence strongly suggests that this wreck is Columbus’ famous flagship, the Santa Maria,” team leader Barry Clifford is quoted as saying by The Independent, a British newspaper.
Clifford said the next step would be to work with the Haitian government on a detailed excavation of the wreck.
The claim is based on photographic documentation of the underwater site, plus Clifford’s interpretation of previous research that identified the location of La Navidad, the fortified settlement that Columbus established on the coast of present-day Haiti after the Santa Maria ran aground on Christmas Day, 1492. The Independent quoted Clifford as saying that the location of the wreckage site was consistent with descriptions set down in Columbus’ diary.
Columbus and his crew had set out from Spain earlier that year in the Santa Maria as well as two other ships, the Niña and the Pinta. He was searching for an easy trade route to Asia. Instead, he came upon the New World. The voyage set the stage for widespread European settlement of the Americas.
A week after the Santa Maria sank, Columbus left most of his crew behind in La Navidad and sailed back to Spain with the Niña and the Pinta. He came back to the Americas a year later with a 17-ship fleet — but when he returned to La Navidad, he found the fort in ruins, destroyed by the island’s native inhabitants.
Eventually, La Navidad and the wreck of the Santa Maria became the focus of an archaeological mystery.
IMAGE: EDWARD H. HART / DETROIT PUBLISHING CO. VIA LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
A replica of the Santa Maria, built in the 1890s to mark the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus’ first voyage to the Americas, plies the seas.
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