One was an "offical" and the other personal. He gave the offical one to the crown and kept the other for his use.
Yes. Christopher Columbus
Yes. Christopher Columbus
he kept trying
One of his ships broke down but he kept going
Christopher Columbus was a brave man. But he failed many times. I am Shure at times he wanted to give up. He failed when he joined in the attempt to conquer the Kingdom of Naples. He was captured by Portuguese ships. He didn't even find India, like he was supposed to. He failed at many things but that didn't get him down. He just kept on going. This is a valuable lesson to be learned, don't let you're failures get you down.
He kept two logs because he wanted to raise the morale of his crew. He kept one log that said the actual time that his ships had been sailing and the other log, that he left for his crew to find, had a shorter amount of time so the crew wouldn't be mad about the amount of time they had sent sailing.
Columbus was right about the world being round.
Christopher Columbus was the author of a book called 'la aventura de América'. This book has never been published. Only one known copy in existence(the original hand written copy) and it is hidden in the Vatican library. The exact reason the Vatican has kept this book from reaching the public is unknown.
Christopher Columbus discovered America for Europeans in 1492. He started his voyage on Aug. 3rd 1492, leaving Palos, Spain.According to the travel journals he kept, the first island on which he landed was modern San Salvador on Monday, October 10, 1492.
The newest research on Columbus actually shows that he was Spanish and not Italian. He wrote only in Spanish and spoke only Spanish. His wife was Spanish nobility. Historians think that Columbus took on the persona of an Italian because his family in Spain were not friends with the crown and he knew he wouldn't be able to get funding for his voyage if he kept his real identity.
i think it will be 13 and it was because the ships kept
The place is called "port" where ships are kept? woodenboatusa.com