Letter from ChristopherColumbus: A Common Core Unit
from the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Epistola Christofori Colom . . . de insulis Indie supra Gangem, March 14, 1493. Published in
Rome, April 1493.
A Letter addressed to the noble Lord Raphael Sanchez, Treasurer to their most invincible
Majesties, Ferdinand and Isabella, King and Queen of Spain, by Christopher Columbus, to
whom our age is greatly indebted, treating of the islands of India recently discovered beyond the
Ganges, to explore which he had been sent eight months before under the auspices and at the
expense of their said Majesties.
Knowing that it will afford you pleasure to learn that I have brought my undertaking to a
successful termination, I have decided upon writing you this letter to acquaint you with all the
events which have occurred in my voyage, and the discoveries which have resulted from it.
Thirty-three days after my departure from Cadiz I reached the Indian sea, where I discovered
many islands, thickly peopled, of which I took possession without resistance in the name of our
most illustrious Monarch, by public proclamation and with unfurled banners. To the first of these
islands, which is called by the Indians Guanahani, I gave the name of the blessed Saviour (San
Salvador), relying upon whose protection I had reached this as well as the other islands to each
of these I also gave a name, ordering that one should be called Santa Maria de la Concepcion,
another Fernandina, the third Isabella, the fourth Juana, and so with all the rest respectively. As
soon as we arrived at that, which as I have said was named Juana, I proceeded along its coast a
short distance westward, and found it to be so large and apparently without termination, that I
could not supposed it to be an island, but the continental province of Cathay. Seeing, however,
no towns or populous places on the sea coast, but only a few detached houses and cottages, with
whose inhabitants I was unable to communicate, because they fled as soon as they saw us, I went
further on, thinking that in my progress I should certainly find some city or village. At length,
after proceeding a great way and finding that nothing new presented itself, and that the line of
coast was leading us northwards (which I wished to avoid, because it was winter, and it was my
intention to move southwards; and because moreover the winds were contrary), I resolved not to
attempt any further progress, but rather to turn back and retrace my course to a certain bay that I
had observed, and from which I afterwards dispatched two of our men to ascertain whether there