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- Q1728627 subject Q5875872.
- Q1728627 subject Q7143956.
- Q1728627 subject Q8093253.
- Q1728627 subject Q8093259.
- Q1728627 subject Q8516463.
- Q1728627 abstract "The Capitulations of Santa Fe between Christopher Columbus and the Catholic Monarchs were signed in Santa Fe, Granada on April 17, 1492. They granted Columbus the titles of Admiral of the Ocean Sea, the Viceroy, the Governor-General and honorific Don, and also the tenth part of all riches to be obtained from his intended voyage. The document followed a standard form in 15th-century Castile with specific points arranged in chapters (capítulos). Although not a formal agreement, the capitulations resulted from negotiation.When Columbus' proposal was initially rejected, Isabella I of Castile convoked another assembly, made up from sailors, philosophers, astrologers and others to reexamine the project. The experts considered absurd the distances between Spain and the Indies that Columbus calculated. The monarchs also became doubting, but a group of influential courtiers convinced them that they would lose little if the project failed and would gain much if it succeeded. Among those advisors were the Archbishop of Toledo Hernando de Talavera, the notary Luis de Santángel and the chamberlain Juan Cabrero. The royal secretary Juan de Coloma was ordered to formulate the capitulations. The agreement took three months to prepare because the monarchs were busy with other matters. The capitulations were sealed at the Santa Fe encampment, on the outskirts of a besieged Granada.The original version has not survived. The earliest surviving copy is contained in the confirmations issued by the Crown in Barcelona in 1493. The omission of the word 'Asia' has led some historians to suggest that Columbus never intended to go there, but only to discover the new lands. In 2009 the Santa Fe Capitulations were inscribed on UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register.".
- Q1728627 thumbnail Capitulacionsori.jpg?width=300.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q1134342.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q1138610.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q132851.
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- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q1492.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q1552718.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q186851.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q217196.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q244741.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q3823766.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q382844.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q45859.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q4725733.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q473858.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q5328647.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q559368.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q5875872.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q593355.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q615722.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q7143956.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q715269.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q7322.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q7809.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q8093253.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q8093259.
- Q1728627 wikiPageWikiLink Q8516463.
- Q1728627 comment "The Capitulations of Santa Fe between Christopher Columbus and the Catholic Monarchs were signed in Santa Fe, Granada on April 17, 1492. They granted Columbus the titles of Admiral of the Ocean Sea, the Viceroy, the Governor-General and honorific Don, and also the tenth part of all riches to be obtained from his intended voyage. The document followed a standard form in 15th-century Castile with specific points arranged in chapters (capítulos).".
- Q1728627 label "Capitulations of Santa Fe".
- Q1728627 depiction Capitulacionsori.jpg.