Almost anyone who at the time knew something about navigation. First the Portuguese had - even before he started out - worked out that Columbus could never find China where he thought it would be; and later on the Spanish experts decided the same thing, but Queen Isabella decided to let him have a shot at it anyway.
Most famously, the cartographer (not explorer, by the way) Amerigo Vespucci also worked out that what Columbus had found could not possibly be China. He never called it "America" himself though, nor did the people around him. The very first mention of "America" is on a map made in Bristol, England, showing the parts of North America that had been discovered by an expedition funded by a British tradesman called Richard Ameryk.
Ah, isn't that fascinating? There was an explorer named Christopher Columbus who claimed land for both Spain and Portugal during his voyages to the Americas. It's incredible how explorers like him played a role in shaping the world we live in today. Just like a painter creating a beautiful landscape, explorers leave their mark on history with their discoveries.
The explorer who stayed home was Prince Henry when he taught sailors in navigation to make sure they make their way through their destination to find a water route to the indies (Asia). They wanted to find a water route because the land route in Constantinople was closed off.
The land of Europe and Asia together is sometimes called
Columbia was named after Christopher Columbus, but the first person to actually set foot on the land was Alonso de Ojeda.
I would say through his military career in Ireland. Apart from that he had no other training as a explorer.
The explorer who believed that Christopher Columbus had found land was Amerigo Vespucci. He was an Italian navigator and explorer who, after sailing to the New World, argued that the lands discovered by Columbus were part of a new continent, separate from Asia. This belief contributed to the naming of America, derived from his first name, in recognition of his contributions to the understanding of the geography of the New World.
Christopher Columbus.
A lot of people think it was Christopher Columbus but it was really Leif Ericson who was the first European to reach the New World. He was a Viking explorer and it is not known when he landed but he set out in 1003 and later returned back to Europe.
He claimed San Salvador for Spain. Columbus believed he had reached Asia and was in the Indies. This belief explains why he called the people Indians. (5th grade history book)
He concluded that the land discovered was larger than previously believed, and different from the Asia described by Ptolemy and Marco Polo and therefore was an entirely new continent
Though Columbus was probably not the first European explorer to reach the Americas, Never admitting that he had reached a continent previously unknown In either case, Columbus left Portugal for Castile in 1485.
Asia
Christopher Columbus landed in the Bahamas, however thinking he had made it to Asia.
Columbus tried to sail to Asia, but found unknown land.
Christopher Columbus is the explorer who said that quote. He believed he had reached China when he landed in the Americas, describing the land as sterile because it was not as prosperous or developed as he had expected.
Asia- when he relized the land he was on was an island he thought he was in Japan
india