Although it
is commonly held that it was Columbus who discovered Tobago, recent thinking
casts some doubt on this legend.
Allegedly, it
was on his third voyage in August 1498 that the admiral of the ocean sighted
Tobago and Grenada as he sailed out of the Gulf of Paria, through the Dragon’s
Mouth, and headed northwest for Hispaniola.
According to
biographer Las Casas ‘on coming out of the entrance he saw an island to the
north which was distant from the strait 26 leagues and he named it Isla de la
Asuncion. He saw another and called it La Concepcion.’
However, the
name Concepcion appears on none of the charts of teh West Indies from this
period.
S.E. Morrison,
historian, tracing Columbus’ third voyage, writes:
“He saw an
island on August 4th of very high land to the northeast, which might be 26
leagues from there and named it Belaforma.”
This sighting
on the 4th August cannot have been of Tobago, as Columbus was still inside the
Gulf of Paria, which he left on the 13th August. He may have seen the Northern
Range of Trinidad, its peaks enskyed, mists shrouding the base of the mountain
range. In any event, he thought that the land along which he was sailing was a
large island, never knowing that he had come upon the great continent of South
America.
In 1502,
Alonzo de Ogeda, accompanied by Columbus’ trusted pilot Juan de la Cosa, sailed
from Spain on hi second Caribbean voyage. Two of the four ships he sailed with
were called ‘Santa Maria de la Grenada’ and ‘La Magdalena’. On reaching
Trinidad, a third ship, the ‘Santa Anna’ went missing. While searching for it
to the north east of Trinidad, both Grenada and Tobago were sighted, and as was
customary named after the two vesseld: Tobago becoming ‘La Magdalena’ as it
appears on a map dated 1508, printed in Naples, Italy.
‘La Magdalena’
did not survive as a name. Instead, the island became known first as ‘Tavaco’,
then ‘Tabagua’, then as ‘Tobago’, which was the name given by the tribal people
who inhabited the island to their long-stemmed pipes in which they smoked a
herb that they called ‘cohiba’. It is possible, even probable, that Tobago was
named or rather misnamed after the leaf which was found growing there and is now
smoked throughout the world.
No comments:
Post a Comment