The fourth voyage of Columbus was a Spanish maritime expedition in 1502–1504 to the western Caribbean Sea led by Christopher Columbus. The voyage, Columbus's last, failed to find a western maritime route to the Far East, returned relatively little profit, and resulted in the loss of many crew men, all the fleet's ships, and a year-long marooning in Jamaica. It is deemed the first non-Amerindian discovery of mainland Middle America, and one of the first non-Amerindian, non-Norse discoveries of continental North America.[n 1]

Fourth voyage of Columbus
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Landing of Columbus / 1847 oil on canvas by J Vanderlyn / via Commons
CountrySpain
LeaderChristopher Columbus
StartCádiz
6–11 May 1502 (1502-05)
EndSanlúcar de Barrameda
7 November 1504 (1504-11-07)
GoalTo discover a western maritime passage to the Far East
Ships
  • Capitana
  • Santiago
  • Gallego
  • Vizcaíno
Crew138–152 men / excl impressed Amerindians
Fatalities33–34 men / excl Amerindian deaths
Achievements
Route

Caribbean route / 2011 map by K Pickering / via Commons

Prelude

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Upon being released from prison on 17 December 1500, Columbus set about planning what he deemed would be 'his most significant, most profitable expedition yet.'[1] The 1497 discovery of an eastern maritime passage to 'the opulent East,' by Vasco de Gama, had steeled Columbus's determination to find a shorter, more direct western route.[2] Consequently, on 26 February 1502, Columbus requested licence to sail on a fourth voyage.[2] Passage to the East, he reasoned, might lay farther west than anyone had prior sailed.[2] The project being deemed viable and desireable, the Catholic Monarchs granted authorisation on 14 March.[3] The royal licence approved disbursement of ten thousand gold pesos for fitting out a fleet, appointed Francisco de Porras as comptroller of spoils, and Diego de Porras as auditor and Crown representative, and forbid the taking of slaves, among other terms and conditions.[4] Columbus enlisted Diego Tristán to captain the flagship, La Capitana, Francisco de Porras for Santiago de Palos, Pedro de Terreros for El Gallego, and Bartolomeo Fieschi for Vizcaíno.[4] One hundred and forty men and boys were reportedly recruited to man the fleet.[4] By 28 April, when all preparations had been finalised, Columbus had spent 2,259,239 maravedis on wages, rent, equipment, and provisions.[5]

Voyage

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Departure

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The Columbian fleet set sail on 9 May 1502.[4] After a brief detour to Arzila, Morocco, which Ferdinand II had requested, the fleet reached Hierro, Canary Islands, where they reprovisioned.[4] The fleet reached Martinique in 21 days, the fastest Atlantic crossing of Columbus's career.[4]

Antilles

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Crew well-rested and ships repaired, the fleet departed the Lesser Antilles due west.[4] Though his commission forbade landing at Hispaniola at this stage of the voyage, Columbus anchored just off the Ozama River by the end of June, as he wished to request permission to enter the port of Santo Domingo so as to shelter therein from a hurricane he feared was brewing.[4] The petition was denied, but the Admiral was shortly proven right by the landing of a 'massive hurricane,' which the fleet weathered reasonably well, possibly off the Jaina River.[4] After repairing the ships, the fleet set off downwind from Hispaniola on 15 July.[6] After a brief stay at Isle of Pines, Cuba, the ships picked up stiff north-easterlies and set of due southwest.[7]

Honduras

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Sea coast village / 1931 lithograph by A Morris / via HathiTrust

On 30 July, a crewmate sighted Bonacca.[7] Notably, upon anchoring off the island, a richly-laden merchant's canoe approached the fleet.[7] Noting their goods were 'all of a quality superior to what they had seen before,' the Spaniards forced a trade, buying ceramics, dyed cotton textiles, flint-edged swords, and copper hatchets with 'the usual baubles.'[7] As the vessel is thought to have hailed from some nearby port in the Maya Lowlands, the event is deemed by some scholars the first instance of contact between Maya and non-Amerindian peoples.[8][n 2]

After impressing the canoe's elderly skipper, the fleet anchored in the lee of Cape Honduras, 'where they made the first landing on the mainland of North America.'[7] They next anchored off the Romano River, due east, where 'Columbus took formal possession' of the newly discovered lands on 17 August.[7] The weather, which beset them with strong headwinds and fierce rain, prolonged the fleet's journey southeastwards to Cape Gracias a Dios, so christened because when they rounded it on 14 September, the weather improved noticeably.[7]

Nicaragua

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On 16 September, two days after having turned south at Cape Gracias a Dios, the fleet anchored just off a large estuary, 'probably [that of] the Rio Grande,' with surf so strong it swamped one of the boats, leading to the death by drowning of two crewmates.[7]

Costa Rica

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On 25 September, the fleet moored off Puerto Limón, where they attempted to trade with the Talamancan locals, two of whom were impressed to help with Castilian–Amerindian translation.[7]

Panama

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On 5 October, the fleet entered Almirante Bay, where Columbus 'found the first sign of fine gold, which an [Amerindian man] wore like a large medal on his breast.'[7] They then anchored in the Chiriqui Lagoon, which the Talamancan interpreters informed was a nine-day's march from Ciguare, a rich land which lay on another ocean.[7] Columbus took Ciguare to mean Ciamba, but nonetheless seems to have given up his search for a maritime passage to the East, having had no luck so far, and instead focussed on trading for gold, fine specimens of which the new-found peoples had.[7]

The ships put out on 17 October, due southeast where they sighted Veragua, a local village which Amerindian guides noted for its gold production.[7] A storm then blew the ships east to Porto Bello, and farther east to Nombre de Dios, where the crew dropped anchors to repair the fleet.[9] To their misfortune, the weather only worsened, tempestuous winds and currents battering the ships back and forth between Porto Bello and the Chagres River.[10] Conditions finally improved on 3 January 1503, allowing the fleet to leave for the Belén River mouth, where they anchored some days later.[10]

At this point, Columbus lead exploratory parties up the river, while his brother, Bartholomew, led parties up the Veragua River.[10] In February, 'the Spanish put up ten or twelve houses on the west bank of the river [Belén],' thereby founding Santa María de Belén.[10] This soon proved an unwelcome development among the locals, however, with whom relations quickly soured to the point of military engagement.[10] Seeking to stave off an attack, Columbus authorised the abduction of the local cacique Quibián, and his family and principal subordinates.[10] The pre-emptive strike, led by Bartholomew and eighty men, proved both successful and profitable, netting them 'a good deal of gold.'[10] The cacique soon managed to escape however, and responded with a force of four hundred warriors.[10] Though the crew managed to repel the attack, they suffered twelve fatal and several non-fatal casualties.[11] Growing convinced of Santa María de Belén's untenable situation, Columbus deemed it prudent to abandon the colonial project.[12] Consequently, on 16 April, all ships but El Gallego set sail due east, with Diego Méndez succeeding the recently deceased Diego Tristán as captain of the flagship.[12] After scuttling the newly-unseaworthy Vizcaíno at Porto Bello, the now-halved fleet reached a headland, probably Punta de Mosquito, and set off northwards on 1 May.[12]

Antilles

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L'éclipse de lune de Christophe Colomb / 1879 sketch by C Flammarion / via Commons

The fleet, reduced now to La Capitana and Santiago de Palos, both already in a sorry state, anchored at the Jardín de la Reina, Cuba, on 12 May.[12] That week proved especially disastrous for the leaky ships, and taxing for the crew.[12] With 'ships pierced by borers worse than a honeycomb, the people spiritless and desperate,' they carried on to Jamaica, reaching St Ann's Bay on 25 June.[12] Columbus deeming the fleet unseaworthy, he had both ships run ashore and the 116 crew mates marooned for what would prove to be a year-long odyssey.[12][n 3]

Columbus set about securing a vessel to send for rescue. That July, he enlisted his captains Méndez and Fieschi, twelve crew mates, and twenty Taino rowers to attempt the daring crossing of the Jamaica Channel aboard dugout canoes in two parties.[12] In three days' time, both canoes reached Navassa Island, where several rowers died or fell very ill of dehydration.[12] Despite these odds, the survivors made the rest of the crossing in one day's time.[12] The captains were detained by the governor at Jaraguá, and did not reach Santo Domingo until March 1504.[12] There, the governor denied them use of a small caravel to rescue their mates, further prolonging their marooning.[13]

Meanwhile, back in Jamaica, the stranded crew's discontent festered until 2 January 1504, when Francisco and Diego de Porras led a mutiny of 48 men.[14] The rebels fled ashore towards the eastern end of the island, to the great misfortune of Amerindian settlements they passed.[14] Over the next month, they would attempt the Channel crossing twice, but fail both times, and so return to St Ann's Bay by the end of March, where, after a skirmish, the Porras brothers would be imprisoned, and their mutineers pardoned.[14] Coincidentally, Amerindian attitudes towards the St Ann's party grew strained, leading to markedly fewer provisions.[14] This trend the Admiral rather ingeniously reverted during the lunar eclipse of 29 February, which he convinced the caciques was a sign of divine disapproval of their recent reticence.[14]

Finally, on 29 June, a rescue caravel from Santo Domingo arrived at St Ann's Bay.[14] The rescued crew reached that port on 13 August.[14]

Return

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On 12 September, Columbus, his son, his brother, and 22 crew mates departed Santo Domingo for Sanlúcar de Barrameda, which they reached on 7 November 1504.[14]

Aftermath

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Columbus's hopes to the contrary, this expedition proved to be 'the least profitable and most dangerous of all his voyages,' the explorer having found no passage to the East, returned miserly profits to Castile, lost many men and all four ships, and suffered a year's stranding in Jamaica.[2] The post-voyage debriefing of the Catholic Monarchs was precluded by the death of Isabella I on 26 November 1504.[15] Instead, Columbus presented the voyage's negative results only to Ferdinand II that December in Segovia, with the latter proving less than thrilled, as Columbus reportedly 'received nothing' from the King.[16]

Legacy

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Bronze of Columbus and Amerindian girl in Colón, Panama / in 1907 T Robinson memoir / via IA

In scholarship

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First-hand accounts of the voyage by Columbus, his son Ferdinand, the Porras brothers, Pedro de Ledesma, and Diego Méndez remain extant.[17] Sixteenth century second-hand accounts include one by Bartolomé de las Casas, and another by Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo.[18] The itineraries described in these sources, however, do not perfectly concur, resulting in discrepancies within the literature.[19][n 4]

In culture

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The Capitulations of Santa Fe secured for Columbus and his heirs a number of rights and privileges attaching to lands discovered and formally possessed by him.[20] As Columbus discovered and formally possessed mainland territory during his fourth voyage, rather than insular lands, conflict arose regarding the extent of mainland to which the Capitulations rights and privileges attached.[21] In 1508, this resulted in the protracted Pleitos Colombinos, wherein Columbus's heir, Diego Columbus, sued for recognition of his inherited rights and privileges over lands discovered and possessed, claiming rights and privileges over large tracts of the Central American subcontinent by dint of Columbus's discoveries and acts of formal possession during his fourth voyage.[22]

Tables

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Ships

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Fleet of the fourth voyage of Columbus.[n 5]
Capitana Santiago Gallego Vizcaíno
Variant name Gracia de Dios Santiago de Palos Gallega Vizcaína
Variant name Santa María Bermuda
Class carabela carabela navío navío
Crew 50 37 27 25
Commissioned 4 Mar 1502 4 Mar 1502 4 Mar 1502 4 Mar 1502
Decommissioned 12 Aug 1503 23 Jul 1503 15 Apr 1503 23 Apr 1503
Captain Diego Tristán Francisco de Porras Pedro de Terreros Bartolomé de Fiesco
Pilot Juan Sánchez
Maestre Ambrosio Sánchez Francisco Bermúdez Quintero de Algruta
Contramaestre Antón Donato Pedro Gómez Alonso Remón Martín de Fuenterrabia
Proprietor Mateo Sánchez Alonso Cerrajero Juan de Orquiva
Notable crew Ferdinand Columbus Bartholomew Columbus Pedro de Ledesma
Notable crew Andrea Columbus
Notable crew Diego de Porras
Notable crew Diego Méndez
Notable crew Christopher Columbus · Antón de Alaminas
Notes cf[n 6] cf[n 7]

Itinerary

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Itinerary of the fourth voyage of Columbus.[n 8]
Date< Date> Place Event Notes
26 Feb 1502 26 Feb 1502 Commission requested
4 Mar 1502 4 Mar 1502 Seville Ships commissioned
14 Mar 1502 14 Mar 1502 Valencia de la Torre Commission granted
3 Apr 1502 3 Apr 1502 Seville Departure from
6 May 1502 11 May 1502 Cádiz Departure from
20 May 1502 20 May 1502 Gran Canaria Arrival at
25 May 1502 26 May 1502 Hierro Departure from
15 Jun 1502 16 Jun 1502 Martinique Arrival at
29 Jun 1502 29 Jun 1502 Hispaniola Arrival at
30 Jun 1502 30 Jun 1502 Hispaniola Hurricane
3 Jul 1502 3 Jul 1502 Ocoa Bay Arrival at
14 Jul 1502 15 Jul 1502 Ocoa Bay Departure from
30 Jul 1502 30 Jul 1502 Bonacca Arrival at
14 Aug 1502 17 Aug 1502 Romano River Arrival at
14 Sep 1502 14 Sep 1502 Cape Gracias a Dios Rounding of
16 Sep 1502 16 Sep 1502 Río Grande Arrival at
25 Sep 1502 25 Sep 1502 Puerto Limón Arrival at
5 Oct 1502 5 Oct 1502 Almirante Bay Arrival at
6 Oct 1502 6 Oct 1502 Chiriqui Lagoon Arrival at
16 Oct 1502 17 Oct 1502 Chiriqui Lagoon Departure from
2 Nov 1502 2 Nov 1502 Porto Bello Arrival at
10 Nov 1502 10 Nov 1502 Nombre de Dios Bay Arrival at
23 Nov 1502 23 Nov 1502 Nombre de Dios Bay Departure from
17 Dec 1502 17 Dec 1502 Bahía Limón Arrival at
25 Dec 1502 26 Dec 1502 Bahía Limón Arrival at
3 Jan 1503 3 Jan 1503 Bahía Limón Departure from
6 Jan 1503 6 Jan 1503 Belén River Arrival at
6 Feb 1503 6 Feb 1503 Belén River Party despatched cf[n 9]
16 Apr 1503 16 Apr 1503 Belén River Departure from
1 May 1503 1 May 1503 Departure from
12 May 1503 12 May 1503 Jardín de la Reina Arrival at
20 May 1503 20 May 1503 Jardín de la Reina Departure from
23 Jun 1503 25 Jun 1503 St Ann's Bay Arrival at
2 Jan 1504 2 Jan 1504 St Ann's Bay Mutiny start
29 Feb 1504 29 Feb 1504 St Ann's Bay Lunar eclipse
19 May 1504 20 May 1504 St Ann's Bay Mutiny end
28 Jun 1504 29 Jun 1504 St Ann's Bay Departure from
3 Aug 1504 13 Aug 1504 Santo Domingo Arrival at
12 Sep 1504 12 Sep 1504 Santo Domingo Departure from
7 Nov 1504 7 Nov 1504 Sanlúcar de Barrameda Arrival at

Accounts

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Itineraries as per select accounts the fourth voyage of Columbus.[n 10]
Place Porras Columbusp Columbusf Ledesma Casas Notes
Martininó Dominica Martininó
Dominica
Santa Cruz
San Juan
Hispaniola Española Española Española Española
Jamaica Jamaica Los Pozos Isletas cf[n 11]
Jardín de la Reina Las Figueras Jardín de la Reina
Guanaja Guanajas Guanaja Guanasa Isla Guanaja / isla de Pinos cf[n 12]
Cyguare
Cape Honduras Punta Caxinas Punta Cajinas Punta Caxinas cf[n 13]
Romano River Río Posysyón Golfo de Honduras Uiuya cf[n 14]
Cape Gracias a Dios Cabo Gracias a Dios Cabo Gracias a Dios Cabo Gracias a Dios Cabo Gracias a Dios Cabo Gracias a Dios
Provincia de Veragua
Nombre de Dios
Río del Desastre Río de la Desgracia Río del Desastre
Cabo de Toas cf[n 15]
Provincia del Cariay Cariay Isla Quiribirí / Cariay Provincia de Cariay Isla Quiribirí / Cariari o Huerta
Cerabaró Çarabaru Canal Cerabaró Provincia de Carábaru Carabaró
Aburemá Canal Aburemá Aburemá
Río Guiga Río Guiga
Ysla del Escudo cf[n 16]
Río Cateba Provincia de Catiba Río Catiba
Cobraba
Veragua / Hurirá Provincia de Urirá Veragua / Hurirá
Cubija Cubija
Punta de Prados cf[n 17]
Provincia de Cobraba
Porto Bello Belpuerto Portobelo Puerto Belo cf[n 18]
Islas Nombre de Dios Puerto Nombre de Dios
Bastimentos Puerto de Bastimentos Puerto de Bastimentos Puerto de Bastimentos Puerto de Bastimentos
Tierra Guiga
Puerto Retrete Puerto Retrete Puerto Retrete Puerto Retrete
Portobelo
Canal Huiva
N Ebra Río Yebra Río Yebra
Bahía Limón Puerto Gordo cf[n 19]
Río Beragua Beragua o Huerta Río Beragua / Hurirá Río Veragua Río Veragua
Puerto Cobraba
Zobraba
Río Cateba
Beragua
St Ma de Belén Belén Río Belén
Belporto Portobelo Belporto
Puerto Retrete Puerto Retrete
Islas Barbas Islas Barvas Islas Barbas
Punta Mármol Punta Cartagena
Islas Tortugas Islas Tortugas
Juana Mango Jardín de la Reina Ysla de Cuba Jardín de la Reina
Jamaica Jamaica Jamaica Jamaica Jamaica

See also

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Notes and references

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Explanatory footnotes

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  1. ^ Dubbed El Alto Viaje by Columbus (Bedini 2000, p. 720). In infobox, start per Davidson 1997, p. 451; end per Polo Martín 2015, p. 146, Bedini 2000, p. 727; goal per Polo Martín 2015, p. 144, Davidson 1997, p. 450; ships per Bedini 2000, p. 721; crew per León Guerrero 2005, pp. 22, 31–32, Gil 2003, p. 614, Bedini 2000, p. 721; fatalities per León Guerrero 2005, pp. 24–32; achievements per Reichert 2017, p. 13, Hofman & Keehnen 2019, p. 239, Fernández-Armesto 1991, pp. 164, 164. Note, Bay of Honduras bound by a line running from Cape Catoche to Cape Gracias a Dios per Reichert 2017, p. 11.
  2. ^ The nearest major maritime port was Nito, in Manche Chol or Toquegua polities, while the nearest maritime post simpliciter was Masca, in Toquegua. Alternatively, the merchants 'may have been part of a high culture akin to the Mayan [Maya]' (Bedini 2000, p. 724). Candidates for such group include (i) the fairly Mayanised but as-yet-unidentified people of the Lower Ulua Valley, (ii) the not-so-fairly Mayanised Paya people of the Bay Islands and abutting mainland (Healy & Savage 2021, pp. 2–3, Ikäheimo, Salmi & Äikäs 2015, pp. 160, 167–168, Sheptak 2013, pp. 39, 54–57, 62).
  3. ^ Of the original 140 men, 'six had died or deserted before Veragua, twelve had been killed at Belen, and six had since died' (Bedini 2000, p. 726).
  4. ^ Davidson 1997, pp. xiv, xxv deems the Ferdinand and Casas works as both the most influential accounts of Columbus generally, and so inaccurate or distorted as to make ascertaining fact from myth 'the most difficult task for the Columbus' scholar reading them. Similarly, Polo Martín 2015, p. 152 deems the Ferdinand work the most detailed account of Columbus's fourth voyage, but also questions its fidelity to first-hand experience. The Porras source has been noted for its inclusion of distances, and the Ledesma one for its geographic coherence Polo Martín 2015, pp. 147, 151. Davidson 1997, p. 451 notes that historical accounts of the voyage do not agree on 'most of the dates' they provide, citing as an example the date of departure from Cádiz, which was 'reported differently by all participants.'
  5. ^ Per León Guerrero 2005, pp. 23–32 or Gil 2003, pp. 619, 631–634, unless otherwise stated. Note, pronouns excluded from Variant name rows.
  6. ^ Andrea was Columbus's nephew (León Guerrero 2005, p. 25). The Diegos are named in the literature, eg de Porras in Polo Martín 2015, pp. 144, 147–148, Méndez in León Guerrero 2005, pp. 28–29 or Gil 2003, p. 619.
  7. ^ Pedro is named in the literature, eg in Polo Martín 2015, pp. 144, 149–150.
  8. ^ Per Polo Martín 2015, pp. 144, 146 or León Guerrero 2005, p. 22 or Bedini 2000, pp. 720–727 or Fernández-Armesto 1991, pp. xix–xx, xxvii, unless otherwise stated.
  9. ^ Per Gil 2003, p. 616.
  10. ^ Per Polo Martín 2015, pp. 154–155. Tha accounts are those of, from left to right, the Porras brothers, Columbus himself, Columbus's son, de Ledesma, and de las Casas.
  11. ^ Note, per Columbus's son, Los Pozos were islands near Jamaica (Polo Martín 2015, p. 152).
  12. ^ Place per Polo Martín 2015, p. 147. Note, per Columbus's son, Guanaja was a large island, but per the Porras brothers, it was small (Polo Martín 2015, pp. 147, 152).
  13. ^ Place per Polo Martín 2015, p. 152. Note, per the Porras brothers, this peninsula was 70 leagues distant from Cabo Gracias a Dios (Polo Martín 2015, pp. 147–148).
  14. ^ Place per Bedini 2000, p. 724.
  15. ^ Note, per the Porras brothers, this cape was 12 leagues distant from Río del Desastre (Polo Martín 2015, pp. 147–148).
  16. ^ Note, per the Porras brothers, this island was 15 leagues distant from Aburemá (Polo Martín 2015, pp. 147–148).
  17. ^ Note, per the Porras brothers, this peninsula was 28 leagues distant from Ysla de Escudo, and 35 leagues from Puerto de Bastimentos (Polo Martín 2015, pp. 147–148).
  18. ^ Place per Bedini 2000, p. 724.
  19. ^ Place per Bedini 2000, p. 725. Note, per Columbus, this entry logs a return arrival to Puerto Gordo, but no first arrival is logged (Polo Martín 2015, pp. 144–145).

Short citations

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  1. ^ Polo Martín 2015, p. 144; Bedini 2000, p. 720.
  2. ^ a b c d Bedini 2000, p. 720.
  3. ^ Bedini 2000, pp. 720–721.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bedini 2000, p. 721.
  5. ^ Gil 2003, p. 613.
  6. ^ Bedini 2000, pp. 721, 724.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Bedini 2000, p. 724.
  8. ^ Hofman & Keehnen 2019, p. 239; Reichert 2017, p. 13; Bedini 2000, p. 361.
  9. ^ Bedini 2000, pp. 724–725.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Bedini 2000, p. 725.
  11. ^ Bedini 2000, pp. 725–726.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Bedini 2000, p. 726.
  13. ^ Bedini 2000, pp. 726–727.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h Bedini 2000, p. 727.
  15. ^ Polo Martín 2015, p. 146; Bedini 2000, p. 727.
  16. ^ Polo Martín 2015, p. 146; Bedini 2000, p. 727; Fernández-Armesto 1991, p. xix.
  17. ^ Polo Martín 2015, p. 144; Davidson 1997, pp. 448–450.
  18. ^ Polo Martín 2015, p. 144; Davidson 1997, p. 450.
  19. ^ Polo Martín 2015, p. 144.
  20. ^ Bedini 2000, pp. 413–415.
  21. ^ Bedini 2000, p. 415.
  22. ^ Bedini 2000, p. 416.

Full citations

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  1. Bedini SA, ed. (2000) [first published 1992 by Simon & Schuster]. The Christopher Columbus Encyclopedia (reprint of 1st ed.). Basingstoke, England: Macmillian. doi:10.1007/978-1-349-12573-9. ISBN 978-1-349-12573-9.
  2. Carter R (November 2006). "Yucatan Channel and Trade". FAMSI Journal of the Ancient Americas. sn: 1–7. OCLC 613035173.
  3. Cerezo Martínez R (2007–2008). "El plan, los viajes y los números de Cristóbal Colón". Cuadernos de Estudios Borjanos. L–LI: 441–481. ISSN 0210-8224.
  4. Conti S (2011). "El cuarto viaje de Colon y las primeras posesiones españolas en Tierra Firme según algunos mapas del siglo XVI". Revista de estudios colombinos. 7: 35–48. ISSN 1699-3926.
  5. Davidson MH (1997). Columbus Then and Now: A Life Reexamined. Norman, Oklahoma; London: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-2934-4. OL 3353000W.
  6. de Altolaguirre y Duvale A, Bonilla y San Martín A, eds. (1892). De los pleitos de Colón. Colección de documentos inéditos relativos al descubrimiento, conquista y organización de las antiguas posesiones españolas de ultramar : Segunda serie : Colección de documentos inéditos de ultramar. Vol. 7. Madrid: Real Academia de la Historia.
  7. Fernández-Armesto F (1991) [first published 1991 by Oxford University Press]. Columbus (reprint of 1st ed.). Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-215898-8.
  8. García Cruzado E, ed. (2011). Jornadas IV, V y VI, 2008, 2009 y 2010. Actas de las jornadas de historia sobre el descubrimiento de América. Vol. II. Palos de la Frontera, Spain: Universidad Internacional de Andalucía; Ayuntamiento de Palos de la Frontera. doi:10.56451/10334/3367. hdl:10334/3367. ISBN 978-84-7993-211-4.
  9. Gil J (2003). "Las cuentas del cuarto viaje de Cristóbal Colón". Anuario de Estudios Americanos. 60 (2): 611–634. doi:10.3989/aeamer.2003.v60.i2.160.
  10. Gómez PR (2006). "Çoçumba, los mayas, los españoles y la comercialización del cacao (1502–1600)". Yaxkin. XXII: 5–41. ISSN 0254-7627.
  11. Goodwin WA (July 2011). Archaeology and Indigeneity, Past and Present: A View from the Island of Roatán, Honduras (MA thesis). Tampa, Florida: University of South Florida.
  12. Healy PF, Savage D (March 2021). "The T-shaped "axe" from Northeast Honduras: Observations on chronology and function of a pre Columbian stone tool". Journal of Lithic Studies. 8 (1): 1–22. doi:10.2218/jls.5771. S2CID 245319193.
  13. Hofman C, Keehnen F (2019). Hofman CL, Keehnen FW (eds.). Material Encounters and Indigenous Transformations in the Early Colonial Americas: Archaeological Case Studies. The Early Americas: History and Culture. Vol. 9. Leiden; Boston: Brill. doi:10.1163/9789004273689. ISBN 978-90-04-27368-9.
  14. Ikäheimo J, Salmi AK, Äikäs T, eds. (2015). Sounds Like Theory: XII Nordic Theoretical Archaeology Group Meeting in Oulu 25–28 April 2012. Monographs of the Archaeological Society of Finland. Vol. 2. Helsinki: Archaeological Society of Finland. ISBN 978-952-67594-7-0.
  15. Keen B, ed. (1959). The Life of the Admiral Christopher Columbus by his Son Ferdinand. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press.
  16. León Guerrero MM (2005). "Los pasajeros del cuarto viaje de Colón". Revista de estudios colombinos. 1: 19–32. ISSN 1699-3926.
  17. León Guerrero MM (2006). "Cronistas de los viajes colombinos". Revista de humanidades: Tecnológico de Monterrey. 20: 112–129. ISSN 1405-4167.
  18. Major RH, ed. (1870) [first published 1847 by the Hakluyt Society]. Select letters of Christopher Columbus, with other Original Documents relating to this Four Voyages to the New World. First series. Vol. 43 (2nd ed.). London: Hakluyt Society. OL 6916430M.
  19. Polo Martín B (June 2015). "La controversia sobre la cartografía del cuarto viaje colombino durante la regencia de Fernando el Católico: la ruta real". Revista de estudios colombino. 11: 143–156. ISSN 1699-3926.
  20. Reichert R (January–June 2017). "El golfo de Honduras: estrategias geopolíticas y militares de una frontera imperial, siglos XVI-XVIII". Tzintzun. 65: 9–40. ISSN 2007-963X.
  21. Rivera Dorado M, Ciudad Ruiz A, eds. (1986). Los mayas de los tiempos tardíos. Publicaciones de la Sociedad Española de Estudios Mayas. Vol. 1. Madrid: Sociedad Española de Estudios Mayas; Instituto de Cooperación Iberoamericana. ISBN 84-398-7120-1.
  22. Sheptak RN (June 2013). Colonial Masca in motion: tactics of persistence of a Honduran indigenous community (PhD thesis). Leiden, Netherlands: Leiden University. hdl:1887/20999.
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