Amerigo Vespucci: Why America Was Named After Him Instead of Christopher Columbus
by Elias Paul Hawthorne
Amerigo Vespucci: Why America Was Named After Him Instead of Christopher Columbus
Christopher Columbus sailed first — so why doesn't the continent bear his name?
This compelling historical account unravels one of history's most fascinating ironies: how a Florentine merchant and navigator named Amerigo Vespucci came to lend his name to two entire continents, while Christopher Columbus — the man who made first contact with the New World in 1492 — was left off the map entirely.
Vespucci was the first person to recognize North and South America as distinct continents that were previously unknown to Europeans, Asians, and Africans. While Columbus believed until his dying day that he had reached the eastern shores of Asia, Vespucci's mapping of coastlines and constellations, cultural observations, and identification of equatorial ocean currents led to the realization that his travels had taken him to a new continent. Live ScienceHISTORY
Born on March 9, 1454, in Florence, Italy, during the height of the Renaissance, Vespucci came from a prominent family with ties to the Medici dynasty. From banker to navigator, his journey from the counting houses of Florence to the uncharted waters of South America is as remarkable as the discovery itself. HISTORY
In 1507, humanist Martin Waldseemüller suggested that the newly discovered world be named "from Amerigo the discoverer… as if it were the land of Americus or America" — a proposal preserved in a large planisphere on which the name America appeared for the very first time. Encyclopedia Britannica
Columbus found the new world, but Vespucci was the man who recognized that it was a new world — and that single insight changed history forever. The Engines of Our Ingenuity
Inside this book, you will discover:
Why Columbus's stubborn belief that he had reached Asia cost him immortality on the map
How Vespucci's letters spread across Europe and outsold Columbus's own accounts
The role of an obscure German cartographer in deciding what two continents would be called
The Age of Exploration in vivid detail — rivalries, voyages, and the race to understand a new world
The true legacy of Amerigo Vespucci and why history almost forgot him
Whether you are a history enthusiast, a student of the Age of Discovery, or simply someone who has ever wondered why America is called America, this book delivers a richly researched and thoroughly engaging answer.
The name was never an accident. It was a verdict.
$6.99
Get it at
This book isn't live in any stores yet. Check back soon.