Taino Gold
On September 6, 1492 Christopher Columbus set out on a voyage that
was to significantly change the history of the world. His goals
were to establish trade with the court of the Great Khan in China
and to obtain gold, slaves, spices and other valuable commodities.
On Oct. 12, 1492, Columbus landed on the island of Guanahaní
in the Bahamian archipelago. He believed that he had reached the
outskirts of China. Guanahaní was inhabited by the Lucayo
tribe of the Taino People. (Lucayo means dwellers on cays. Our word
cay, meaning small island, comes from the Taino language.) Columbus
renamed Guanahaní San Salvador and declared it to be a territory
of Spain. The Taino inhabitants who he called Indios (Indians) were
declared to be Spanish subjects.
The official interpreter for Columbus' fleet was Luis de Torres
who was a converted Jew. Torres was chosen as fleet interpreter
because he spoke Hebrew and Arabic, which, for some reason, would
enable him to communicate with the Chinese. Apparently Torres was
unable to converse with the Taino in Hebrew so another course of
action was deemed necessary.
Several Tainos were kidnapped. One young man named Guaikan was
taught to speak Spanish and became the interpreter for the expedition.
Guaikan became Cristobol Colón's (Christopher Columbus) adopted
Taino son. He took the name Diego Colón and sailed with Columbus
on his subsequent voyages. Six of the captives were eventually brought
to Spain and baptized with King Ferdinand and Queen Isabela acting
as godparents. They were later allowed to return home with the exception
of one who chose to remain at the Spanish royal court. He died two
years later.
Columbus was finally able to communicate his desire to find the
source of certain amulets and nose rings worn made from a yellow
metal, which the Taino called guanin and the Spanish called oro.
The guanin (an alloy made from gold silver and copper) had been
obtained through trade with the Lucayan's neighbors who inhabited
a large island to the south; today called Cuba.
The Lucayo captives guided Columbus to Cuba and agreed to help
him find the gold, which was so dear to his heart. They followed
their traditional canoe route through the Bahamian Cays. Their first
stop was an island thought to be today's Rum Cay, where, according
to the captives, the inhabitants wore massive golden bracelets and
anklets. No gold was found. Columbus wrote "All they said was
humbug in order to escape". (Two of the Lucayo prisoners took
advantage of a lapse of vigilance and jumped overboard. Fellow Taino
who had been following the fleet in their dugout canoe picked them
up. The natives paddled away so fast that all attempts to recapture
them were in vain.)
The fleet then sailed to what is today Long Island, which Columbus
named Fernandina. Here Columbus was more successful. One of the
islanders was wearing a gold nose stud, which he referred to as
a caracuri. The owner of the caracuri refused Columbus' attempts
at trade and ran away.
Columbus then guided the ships to an island the Taino called Saomete.
He renamed it Isabela after the Queen, and it is now thought to
be Crooked Island. According to his guides there was a gold mine
on this island and a king who wore cloths and had much gold. No
mine or king was found, but Columbus was able to trade with the
inhabitants, exchanging trinkets for gold caracuri.
From Saomete (Isabela) the fleet sailed on to Cuba. A return trip
to the Bahamian Island of Great Inagua called Babeque by the Taino
was attempted after Columbus learned from the Taino of Cuba that
on Babeque the natives "gathered gold on the beach by candles
at night, and then made bars of it with a hammer". Headwinds
forced Columbus to give up the voyage, but Martín Alonzo
Pinzón, captain of the Pinta was successful. No gold was
found on the beaches of that island; not at night, nor at any other
time.
In a letter at least partly intended to solicit financial support
from King Ferdinand and Queen Isabela, Columbus wrote: "…Finally,
to compress into few words the entire summary of my voyage and speedy
return, and of the advantages derivable therefrom, I promise, that
with a little assistance afforded me by our most invincible sovereigns,
I will procure them as much gold as they need, as great a quantity
of spices, of cotton, and of mastic and as many men for the service
of the navy as their Majesties may require. I promise also rhubarb
and other sorts of drugs, which I am persuaded the men whom I have
left ... have found already and will continue to find…"
It is interesting to note that only one report of a potential gold
producing area was actually verified on the first voyage. The other
riches promised were even more disappointing.
The spice that Columbus refers to in his letter was Canella alba,
a plant that smells like cinnamon but is not useful as a spice.
The mastic mentioned in the letter turned out to be the sap of the
turpentine tree and not the valuable resin of the gum mastic tree.
The prospective slaves for service in the navy had such a low survival
rate that the few survivors were returned to their island homes
as an act of mercy by the crown. The rhubarb that was supposed to
have been found was in fact not rhubarb at all but a plant known
now as false rhubarb. The promise of drugs probably refers to the
discovery of an abundance of what was thought to be the medicinal
plant aloe, but which was in reality the relatively worthless, century
plant. Another worthless item that Columbus brought back to Spain
as evidence of the riches that could be exploited from the continuance
of his adventures was the unpleasant-tasting fruit of the icaco,
which he believed to be the coconut mentioned in the writings of
Marco Polo.
Notwithstanding these inconsistencies, Columbus was successful
in obtaining the desired financial support for his second voyage
in which he was instructed by the crown to establish gold mines,
install settlers, develop trade with the Tainos, and convert them
to Christianity.
Marginally productive gold mines were eventually discovered in
Hispaniola and later in Puerto Rico and Cuba. At first it was Spanish
settlers who panned for gold in the rivers and worked the newly
discovered mines, but the combination of disappointing yields, harsh
working conditions and high mortality rates quickly led to the abandonment
of this activity by the Spaniards.
The task of gold mining was then given to enslaved Tainos. Most
died from disease brought on by unsanitary conditions, overwork
and lack of resistance to European illnesses. Countless others succumbed
to famine that resulted when the Taino were not given sufficient
time to provide for their own sustenance. The chronicler, Las Casas,
reported that only ten percent survived after three months of service
and that there was a constant shortage of workers. As a result inhabitants
of other Caribbean islands were captured and enslaved. The mines
in Hispaniola became depleted in the 1520’s and those of Puerto
Rico and Cuba became exhausted within the following decade. By that
time almost all of the estimated six million Taino inhabitants of
the Caribbean had been annihilated.
The Taino cacique Guacanagari, who befriended Columbus and who
was later sold into slavery by his "friend" twice sent
Columbus facemasks with nose, tongue and ears made of gold.
Masks traditionally have spiritual significance. Was Guacanagari
trying to make a statement about the true nature of Columbus's character?
By Gerald Singer
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