Columbus Was Polish King's Son: Historian

We've had it wrong 500 years, says researcher
By Matt Cantor,  Newser Staff
Posted Nov 29, 2010 1:50 PM CST
Columbus Was Polish King's Son: Historian
Christopher Columbus landing in America with the Piuzon Brothers bearing flags and crosses, 1492.   (Getty Images)

Christopher Columbus’ origins have long been shrouded in mystery—was he Italian? Spanish? Greek? None of the above: In fact, his father was a Polish king, argues Columbus expert Manuel Rosa in a new book. Rosa holds that the adventurer's father was Vladislav III, who was not killed in 1444 as thought. Instead, he went into exile, married a Portuguese noblewoman, and fathered Columbus—who lied to protect his father's real identity, Rosa tells the Daily Telegraph.

Columbus’ station would explain both his ability to marry a noble and his knowledge of everything from geography to cartography, which Rosa says points to a top-notch education. "The marriage was approved by the King of Portugal, something that could never have happened if we believe the myth that Columbus washed up in a shipwreck in Portugal," writes Rosa. More evidence: Columbus was “reddish-haired, fair-skinned and blue-eyed,” and his coat of arms looks like the Polish king’s. Click here to find out what Rosa's next step is in his effort to close the book on the mystery.
(More Christopher Columbus stories.)

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