Christopher Columbus

Hello! My name is Christopher Columbus. I was born in a bustling port city called Genoa, in Italy, way back in 1451. Imagine a place filled with the sounds of seagulls, the smell of salty air, and the sight of tall ships with giant sails. That was my home. My father was a wool weaver, but my heart was always pulled toward the sea. From my window, I would watch sailors from faraway lands unload spices, silks, and other treasures. I learned to sail when I was just a boy, and the rolling waves felt more like home to me than solid ground. On those ships, I heard stories of the Indies, a land in the East filled with unimaginable riches. A dream began to grow inside me, a dream as big as the ocean itself. What if, instead of sailing east like everyone else, I could reach the Indies by sailing west, straight into the sunset?

As I grew older, my dream became a daring plan. Most people in my time believed the world was round, but they thought the Atlantic Ocean was far too wide to cross. They told me my idea was foolish and dangerous. But I had studied maps and charts, and I was convinced it was possible. For years, I traveled across Europe, trying to find a king or queen who would believe in my plan and give me the ships and sailors I needed. I went to Portugal, but their king said no. I went to other leaders, and they also turned me away. It was discouraging, but I refused to give up on my dream. I knew I was right. Finally, after many years of trying, I presented my idea to Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain. In 1492, they saw the promise in my plan and agreed to help. They gave me a great gift: three ships and the chance to prove my idea to the world.

On August 3, 1492, my adventure began. I stood on the deck of my flagship, the Santa María, and watched the shores of Spain disappear. My other two ships, the Niña and the Pinta, sailed alongside me. The journey was much longer and harder than I had imagined. Weeks turned into months, and my crew grew restless and afraid. They saw nothing but an endless blue ocean day after day. They worried we would run out of food and water or that we were sailing off the edge of the world. I had to be strong and keep their spirits up, promising them we would find land soon. Then, one night, on October 12, 1492, a lookout shouted, “Tierra! Tierra!” Land! Land! It was the most beautiful word I had ever heard. We had reached an island in what is now called the Bahamas. When we went ashore, we met the people who lived there, the kind Taíno. It was a whole new world, unlike anything I had ever seen.

I returned to Spain as a hero, bringing back stories and proof of the new lands I had found. I made three more voyages across the Atlantic, exploring more islands and the coasts of Central and South America. Though I believed until the day I died in 1506 that I had found a new route to Asia, my journeys did something even more important. They created a bridge between the Old World of Europe and the New World of the Americas. My voyages changed the map of the world forever and started a new age of exploration. Looking back, I see that a boy’s dream from a busy seaport could truly change the course of history.

Reading Comprehension Questions

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Answer: His big dream was to find a new, faster sea route to the wealthy lands of the East by sailing west across the Atlantic Ocean.

Answer: They probably felt scared and worried. The story says the journey was long and difficult and the crew had fears, which means they might have thought they would never find land or get back home.

Answer: It means that before his voyages, maps didn't show the Americas. After he sailed there, mapmakers had to add two huge new continents, which completely changed what people knew about the world.

Answer: The main problem was that many experts thought the ocean was too big to cross and rulers didn't want to pay for such a risky trip. I solved it by being persistent, spending years trying to persuade different rulers until Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain finally agreed to fund my expedition.

Answer: I was determined because I believed the world was round and that sailing west would be a faster, more direct route to the rich lands of the East. I was a dreamer and an explorer who wanted to prove my new idea was right.