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Before Columbus.
No, Christopher Columbus was the one who was given credit for discovering America. The Vikings discovered America long before Columbus. His travels started the permanent contact between Europe and the Americas. He never landed on the North American continent.
The events that happened to Christopher Columbus is that he asked King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella to fund his trip and he was thinking of ways to get goods to Europe
Christopher Columbus lived long before the United States was established. He arrived in the Bahamas in 1492. The US was established in 1776.
he died before his son
No, they may have been here before Columbus but the didnt discover corn in Europe until Christopher Columbus had came and the indians planted and farmed corn.
Nope... St. Christopher was alive long before Christopher Columbus was even born.
Before Columbus.
No, Christopher Columbus was the one who was given credit for discovering America. The Vikings discovered America long before Columbus. His travels started the permanent contact between Europe and the Americas. He never landed on the North American continent.
He discovered Newfoundland 500 years before Christopher Columbus. That makes him the person who discovered the Americas.
No after.
The European way of life at that time was more focused on industrialization, technology, and hierarchy, while the Taino way of life was more communal, centered around agriculture, fishing, and spiritual beliefs. Europeans valued individualism and ownership, while Tainos had a more collective approach to land and resources sharing. This led to conflicts and misunderstandings between the two cultures when they encountered each other in the Americas.
The events that happened to Christopher Columbus is that he asked King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella to fund his trip and he was thinking of ways to get goods to Europe
Christopher Columbus lived long before the United States was established. He arrived in the Bahamas in 1492. The US was established in 1776.
no
he died before his son
No. Corn was domesticated in Mexico, and was not known in Europe before Columbus.