Christopher Columbus referred to the indigenous people he encountered on the islands of the Caribbean as "Indians," believing he had reached the East Indies. This term was a misnomer based on his mistaken belief that he had found a new route to Asia. The specific groups he encountered, such as the Taíno, had their own distinct identities and cultures, which Columbus did not recognize.
Christopher Columbus never landed in the Hawaiian Islands.
El salvador
Tainos
Columbus thought he was in India, and in his way to Asia, the land he founded was the island of Hispaniola, what we now know as Haiti, and Dominican Republic.
People who are from Ireland are called Irish.
Most of the Caribbean Islands had indigenous people who lived on each island well before Columbus ever arrived. Each people had their own name.
its call thw island of the tbh people
Introduced
Columbia
Christopher Columbus never landed in the Hawaiian Islands.
San Salvador was the name Christopher Columbus gave the island he landed on in the Bahamas. The island is now known as Guanahani.
El salvador
San Salvador was the name Christopher Columbus gave the island he landed on in the Bahamas. The island is now known as Guanahani.
primitive or savage
Tainos
Columbus thought he was in India, and in his way to Asia, the land he founded was the island of Hispaniola, what we now know as Haiti, and Dominican Republic.
Galapians