Christopher is a legendary saint who may have never existed. Virtually nothing is known about him, including where he was born and lived. It is thought that he may have been a martyr in the middle of the 3rd century.
To get to India going West. He thought that he had actually arrived in India. He never knew that he had discovered a new continent.
St Petersburg in Russia
St. Christopher, also known as St. Kitts, is an island in the Caribbean that is part of the Federation of Saint Kitts and Nevis. The island was originally inhabited by the Kalinago (Carib) people before being discovered by Christopher Columbus in 1493. It later became a British colony in the 17th century. Thus, its country of origin is associated with the indigenous peoples and European colonial history, primarily British.
No, Christopher Columbus did not die knowing he had discovered a new continent. He believed he had reached the outskirts of Asia, specifically the Indies, and spent much of his life seeking a route to Asia. It was only after his death that the realization emerged that he had encountered a previously unknown continent to Europeans, which would later be named America.
Ur is the first known continent and existed 3 billion years ago.
If St. Christopher actually did exisit it was in the third century. He is mostly a saint of legend.
Nope... St. Christopher was alive long before Christopher Columbus was even born.
mount st helens isn't a continent but its in the continent north America
St. Kitts
Christopher St. Germain was born in 1460.
Hang On St. Christopher was created in 1987.
St. Christopher Ameiva was created in 1802.
Christopher St George was born in 1812.
Christopher St George died in 1877.
St. Christopher's Hospital for Children was created in 1875.
St. Christopher's Episcopal Mission was created in 1943.
St. Christopher is believed to have lived in the 3rd century and to have been from Canaan, which was located in modern-day Syria or Turkey. He is considered a martyr and one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers in the Catholic Church.