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Columbus's Outpost among the Taínos: Spain and America at La Isabela, 1493-1498

HardcoverMay 1, 2002
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ISBN-13: 9780300090406 ISBN-10: 0300090404
Publisher
Yale University Press
Binding
Hardcover
Published
May 1, 2002
Weight
1.2 lbs
Dimensions
24.80×1.90×17.10 cm

About this book

Columbus's Outpost among the Taínos: Spain and America at La Isabela, 1493-1498 by Deagan, Kathleen. Hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780300090406.

In 1493 Christopher Columbus led a fleet of seventeen ships and more than twelve hundred men to found a royal trading colony in America. Columbus had high hopes for his settlement, which he named La Isabela after the queen of Spain, but just five years later it was in ruins. It remains important, however, as the first site of European settlement in America and the first place of sustained interaction between Europeans and the indigenous Tainos. Kathleen Deagan and Jose Maria Cruxent now tell the story of this historic enterprise. Drawing on their ten-year archaeological investigation of the site of La Isabela, along with research into Columbus-era documents, they contrast Spanish expectations of America with the actual events and living conditions at Americas first European town. Deagan and Cruxent argue that La Isabela failed not because Columbus was a poor planner but because his vision of America was grounded in European experience and could not be sustained in the face of the realities of American life. Explaining that the original Spanish economic and social frameworks for colonization had to be altered in America in response to the American landscape and the nonelite Spanish and Taino people who occupied it, they shed light on larger questions of American colonialism and the development of Euro-American cultural identity.