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Amerigo Vespucci
Amerigo Vespucci was a merchant and explorer-navigator who took part in early voyages to the New World and is America's namesake.
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Christopher Columbus
The explorer Christopher Columbus made four trips across the Atlantic in search of a water route from Europe to Asia. He never found it, but he did accidentally "discover" the Americas along the way.
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The 13 Colonies
In 1776, the Declaration of Independence announced that the 13 English colonies in North America were a sovereign nation: the United States of America.
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Pompeii
In the year 79 A.D., Mount Vesuvius erupted, burying the Roman city of Pompeii under a thick blanket of ashes.
(born 1485, Tuscany [Italy]—died 1528, Lesser Antilles) Italian navigator and explorer for France who was the first European to sight New York and Narragansett bays.
After his education in Florence, Verrazzano moved to Dieppe, France, and entered that nation's maritime service. He made several voyages to the Levant, and in 1523 he secured two ships for a voyage backed by the French king to discover a westward passage to Asia. In January 1524 he sailed one of those vessels, La Dauphine, to the New World and reached Cape Fear about the beginning of March. Verrazzano then sailed northward, exploring the eastern coast of North America. He made several discoveries on the voyage, including the sites of present-day New York Harbor, Block Island, and Narragansett Bay, and was the first European explorer to name newly discovered North American sites after persons and places in the Old World.
Verrazzano wrote interesting, though sometimes inaccurate, accounts of the lands and inhabitants that he encountered. His explorations concluded at the eastern part of Newfoundland. His return to France on July 8, 1524, gave King Francis I his nation's claim to the New World.
Verrazzano undertook two more voyages to the Americas. In 1527 he commanded a fleet of ships on an expedition to Brazil that returned profitable dyewood to France. His final voyage began in the spring of 1528, when he sailed with his brother, Girolamo, from Dieppe with two or three ships. The fleet sailed to Florida, the Bahamas, and finally the Lesser Antilles. He anchored there off one of the islands (apparently Guadeloupe), went ashore, and was captured, killed, and eaten by cannibals.
Copyright © 1994-2009 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. For more information visit Britannica.com.
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This Day in History
Feb 10
Lead Story
Kasparov loses chess game to computer, 1996
On this day in 1996, after three hours, world chess champion Gary Kasparov loses the first game of a six-game match against Deep Blue, an IBM computer…
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Illuminated Rotating Universe Tabletop Globe
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Magellan's Lost Fleet DVD
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