Countdown begins to discover where explorer Christopher Columbus came from

19 May 2021, 12:44

A scientist controls a 3D scanner over the alleged remains of bones of Christopher Columbus and family members, in the Anthropology Laboratory at Granada University in Spain
Spain Columbus. Picture: PA

Knowledge of the 15th-century navigator’s early life is scant.

A definitive answer to the question of where Christopher Columbus came from could be just months away as international scientists launched an effort to read the DNA from the explorer’s remains and identify his geographic origin.

Their findings are to be made public in October.

Knowledge of the 15th-century navigator’s early life is scant.

A major breakthrough in establishing a fuller profile of the man who died 515 years ago came after DNA tests in 2003 established that bones in a tomb in the cathedral of Seville were those of Columbus.

Inmaculada Aleman, professor of physical anthropology, measures a bone from the alleged remains of Christopher Columbus and family members, at Granada University in Spain
Inmaculada Aleman, professor of physical anthropology, measures a bone from the alleged remains of Christopher Columbus and family members at Granada University in Spain (AP)

But after that discovery, the research team from Spain’s Granada University that is leading the Columbus research decided to halt its investigation.

This was because DNA technology at the time was neither accurate nor reliable and required a significant amount of genetic material.

After leaps in the sophistication of DNA testing in recent years, gene geography may now ascertain the rough area of a European person’s ancestry.

Jose Antonio Lorente, a professor of forensic medicine at Granada University, said there had been a “radical” improvement in DNA analysis, which now permits tests on very small fragments.

He said researchers are working with four small bone fragments from Columbus, seven bone fragments and a tooth from his son Hernando, and a dozen bone fragments in poor condition from his brother Diego.

The fragments are being sent to genetic identification laboratories in Rome and Florence in Italy, Mexico and the United States, Prof Lorente told an online press conference.

The professor said he believes the generally accepted theory that Columbus was from Genoa in Italy, but the project aims to resolve some “mysteries … and contradictions” in the historical record and obtain “as much information as possible … so that there is no argument”.

Granada University was hosting what it called the first world meeting of Columbus researchers, who are presenting evidence for their different theories about the explorer’s origins.

Columbus’s four transatlantic voyages on behalf of the Spanish monarchs between 1492 and 1504 opened a door to Europe’s colonisation of the Americas, then known as the New World.

Columbus died on May 20 1506 and was buried in the Spanish city of Valladolid, though he had asked to be buried in the Americas.

By Press Association

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