When the native people first saw Columbus and his crew in 1492, they were initially curious and approached the newcomers with caution. Some natives, like the Taíno, greeted Columbus and his men with hospitality, offering gifts and food. However, there was also a sense of apprehension and confusion, as they had never encountered Europeans before. The arrival of Columbus marked the beginning of significant and often devastating changes for indigenous populations in the Americas.
they became fearful and ran away
When the Native said Columbus and his men wear strange clothing they got sacred. After they got scared they ran away.
no he didn't.
yes there were
Columbus wrote in his diary that the people he met would make good slaves. Right off he considered himself superior to the Native Americans he encountered. He saw them as heathen and the Europeans after him felt the same way. It was an attitude that came with the invaders.
they became fearful and ran away
When the Native said Columbus and his men wear strange clothing they got sacred. After they got scared they ran away.
They ran away from his men when they saw him.
Columbus was not a nice man. He chopped a Native American hand off because the man didn't bring him enough gold. He saw the Native Americans as slaves. On his second voyage he took 1200 Native Americans as slaves.
Because they ran away when they saw his men. 8===D
no he didn't.
Christopher Columbus viewed the native populations he encountered in the Americas as inferior and uncivilized. He believed that they were primitive and could be easily dominated, leading to exploitation and mistreatment of the indigenous peoples. Columbus saw them as a means to achieve his goals of wealth and conquest, rather than as equals.
yes there were
Columbus wrote in his diary that the people he met would make good slaves. Right off he considered himself superior to the Native Americans he encountered. He saw them as heathen and the Europeans after him felt the same way. It was an attitude that came with the invaders.
the usa
No. There is are no records available that Columbus ever saw Australia.
Ohioan