Yes, there were already indigenous people living there!
indians
The people who he called Indiens.
Columbus didn't land in North America, but if he had he would have found millions of Native Americans living there.
He meant he discovered a new land for his country, because they were conquerors. People already living there didn't mean anything to them, unless those native people could fight to defend their land, but Columbus had guns.
The Taíno originally inhabited Puerto Rico.
The Taínos were indigenous people who inhabited the islands of the Greater Antilles (Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and Jamaica) and some of the Lesser Antilles at the time of Christopher Columbus's arrival in 1492.
work.
No because people was already there and they thought they was invaders.
work.
The Taino tribe is believed to have inhabited the island of Hispaniola (which includes present-day Haiti) for hundreds of years before the arrival of Europeans. They were the indigenous people of the Caribbean and had a well-established society before the arrival of Christopher Columbus in 1492.
Yes, there were already indigenous people living there!
Work… in Puerto Rico not live tainos live puertoricand. You knowed it? The puertoricans in Puerto Rico have jobs…
Christopher Columbus is generally credited with being one of the first explorers to reach the Caribbean region in 1492 during his famous journey to the Americas. However, it's important to note that Indigenous peoples had been living in the Caribbean for thousands of years prior to Columbus' arrival.
First of all, Puerto Rico has never had, and will never have, a president. Second of all, when Columbus came to Puerto Rico on his second trip, Puerto Rico was only inhabited by the "taino" Indians. Third of all, Columbus discovered the Americas with some other explorers, how can you possibly think there was a president at that time if he was one of the few people to reach the Americas after the indias settled there?
Non-indigenous people started living in Australia with the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788.
As of December, 2008 there are 18,544 persons living with HIV/AIDS in Puerto Rico.