‘Violent colonialist’ Magellan is unfit to keep his place in the night sky, say astronomers
by Robin McKie Science Editor from Science | The Guardian on (#6GA9E)
Indigenous peoples already had their own names for the galaxies named after the 16th-century Portuguese explorer
For centuries Ferdinand Magellan has been accorded a rare privilege. The explorer's name has been written in the stars. Two satellite galaxies of our own Milky Way, which sparkle conspicuously over the southern hemisphere, are labelled the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds.
Now astronomers want to erase this celestial distinction. They say that Magellan, the 16th century Portuguese sailor, was a murderer who enslaved and burned down the homes of Indigenous peoples during his leadership of the first expedition to circumnavigate the globe. They insist his name should no longer be honoured by being associated with the clouds.
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