Article 4SFET America’s origin myth, and its reputation at risk | Letters

America’s origin myth, and its reputation at risk | Letters

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Letters
from World news | The Guardian on (#4SFET)
Contrary to popular belief, the Florentine navigator Amerigo Vespucci has little to do with the name of the modern-day continent, writes Colin Moffat. Plus Patrick Billingham says Donald Trump has brought the US into disrepute

I fear Thomas Eaton (Weekend Quiz, 12 October) is giving further credence to "fake news" from 1507, when a German cartographer was seeking the derivation of "America" and hit upon the name of Amerigo Vespucci, an obscure Florentine navigator. Derived from this single source, this made-up derivation has been copied ever after.

The fact is that Christopher Columbus visited Iceland in 1477-78, and learned of a western landmass named "Markland". Seeking funds from King Ferdinand of Spain, he told the king that the western continent really did exist, it even had a name - and Columbus adapted "Markland" into the Spanish way of speaking, which requires an initial vowel "A-", and dropped "-land" substituting "-ia".

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