Reissued for the 500th Anniversary of Columbus' Voyage to the Americas, this book features Carl Sauer's classic account of the land, nature, and people Columbus encountered. The history of Columbus' four voyages has been told many times. But Sauer's book is still the only work to provide not only a narrative of the voyages and of the colonizing ventures that followed them, but also an exploration of their impact on the peoples, the flora, and the fauna of the Americas. For Sauer, Columbus was simply 'a Genoese of humble birth and small schooling', obstinate and increasingly paranoid. His obsession with gold and the rights he had secured brought the first Spanish venture overseas to the edge of failure. His successors were more competent administrators but continued the quest for riches, destroying the native ecology and the lifestyle of the indigenous peoples. Sauer attempts to show that native Americans had a balanced and highly productive livelihood that gave them abundance, leisure, and satisfaction.
This book offers a unique view of the 'cultural landscape' Columbus encountered and how it was transformed by the Europeans, establishing a pattern of conquest and settlement that was repeated all over Spanish America.
- ISBN10 0520011252
- ISBN13 9780520011250
- Publish Date 20 March 1992
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 23 October 2000
- Publish Country US
- Imprint University of California Press
- Edition New edition
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 320
- Language English