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Christopher Columbus and Queen Isabella of Spain Consummate Their Relationship |
作者Author /  Salman Rushdie 賽 爾 曼•魯 西 迪 |
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Christopher Columbus and Queen
Isabella of Spain Consummate Their Relationship
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- Columbus
needed to make connections in order to make his voyages and in April
1492 King Ferdinand V and Queen Isabella I agreed to sponsor his
expedition, which marked the the first step in the creation
of the Spanish overseas colonial empire. But why does Rushdie
just focus on Queen Isabella? How are the relationships between
Isabella and Columbus described? What are the reasons Rushdie
gives and suggests for Columbus' pursuit of Isabella?
- How does
Columbus and Isabella "consumate" their relationship?
- Who are the
listeners of the story (see the italicized part)? Are they
British? Spanish or Indian?
- What is the
tone of the narration?
Christopher
Columbus, the one who is known to have discovered "the New World," was
born in Genoa, Italy and died in in Volladiod, Spain. Two
relevant pieces of information:
- "The
widely published report of his voyage of 1492 made Columbus famous
throughout Europe and secured for him the title of Admiral of the Ocean
Sea and further royal patronage. Columbus, who never abandoned the
belief that he had reached Asia, led three more expeditions to the
Caribbean. But intrigue and his own administrative failings brought
disappointment and political obscurity to his final years" [From Christopher
Columbus: Man and Myth].
- "Columbus'
mode of operation in Spain, . . . , was to find influential men to act
as his sponsors, and persuade them to introduce him to even more
influential men" [Excerpts
from UNCOVERING THE REAL COLUMBUS].
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