{"id":16932,"date":"2023-03-05T21:27:26","date_gmt":"2023-03-05T20:27:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.winebus.es\/?p=16932"},"modified":"2024-03-05T16:33:54","modified_gmt":"2024-03-05T15:33:54","slug":"the-name-of-america-comes-from-americo-vespucio","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.winebus.es\/en\/2023\/03\/05\/the-name-of-america-comes-from-americo-vespucio\/","title":{"rendered":"The name of America comes from Americo Vespucio."},"content":{"rendered":"
Where does America’s name origin come from? Should America have been called Colombia? Americo Vespucio.<\/h2>\n
Calling America was the award that Am\u00e9rico Vespucio received posthumously. Am\u00e9rico was the best publicist of the XV and XVI century.<\/p>\n
Is it unfair that Christopher Columbus was deprived of the honor of naming the continent he discovered after him and that caused the last push to leave the Middle Ages definitively in the the world?<\/p>\n
History is an interpretation of history<\/h2>\n
It may be unfair. I do not have absolute truths, and every day I am more clear that nobody has them. History is just an interpretation of history. When one is very close to what happened, one has first-hand information but sees it from their subjective point of view, takes sides, and believes and makes believe that they have the truth without realizing that the facts can be seen. in a different way. And when you are far away, you lean on those who were close. Not having experienced the events in the first person allows us to be more objective, but is supported by subjective first-hand information. Therefore all history is an interpretation of history. But that doesn’t make smaller the importance of the event.<\/p>\n
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Book a wine tour with us from Madrid with us.<\/p>\n