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Christopher Columbus - The Discovery Of America And What Happened After
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1,225,826 Views • Jun 3, 2020 • Click to toggle off description
In 1492 Christopher Columbus and his crew went on a journey that will change history forever. They traveled across the Atlantic to the Carribean, there they met the Taino people. Here’s how the Spanish and the Tainos treated each other and what exactly happened in the next years.

Narration: Dean Moody

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Views : 1,225,826
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Jun 3, 2020 ^^


Rating : 4.708 (1,219/15,471 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-03-31T22:32:10.6499Z
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YouTube Comments - 5,083 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@feralcruz2093

2 years ago

We are still alive, the Taino never went extinct

1.8K |

@jakem.1587

2 years ago

Riddle me this. How does someone get credited for discovering a place that is already inhabited by people?

1.1K |

@lindsay1971

5 months ago

Australian here watching to learn a little more about the world, this is the perspective of history that is so often missed. You are doing great work.

32 |

@scoremxcom

1 year ago

“Wherever the European had trod, death seemed to pursue the aboriginal.” — Charles Darwin

329 |

@rafaelramirez1507

2 years ago

I am of Taino blood my grandparents are Puerto Rican .. my parents are Puerto Rican ... I was born in Puerto Rico ... what happened in those years ago happened , we can't change that , but like me there are more of Taino blood and we need to continue thriving and make our future ... long live my Taino heritage 🇵🇷

505 |

@jddj6486

2 years ago

Being Native American, I need this. My father and his siblings were treated so poorly, he didn't even out down on our birth certificates. Unfortunately, all my grandmother and her brothers are all passed, so talking to them about their lives won't happen. Moving around in the Marine Corps made it difficult to attend family get together and now it is just too late. Luckily the internet is there to help me through my journey.

446 |

@end0skeleton778

1 year ago

I'm not Taino, but I have Native American ancestors, and this just gets my soul burning, and my heart pumping.

26 |

@tiffanyi5645

1 year ago

But the Tainos didn’t go extinct. We are alive. Our blood has been passed on through the generations and what has survived of our language and culture has been held sacred. We are proud and strong! ✊🏽✊🏽✊🏽

54 |

@michelfernandez4751

2 years ago

I am cuban and studied anthropology, the tainos are descendant of the siboney and the guanajatabey the oldest in the Caribbean, having contact with the asians who were the first to transit that area they left the caves , they made boats and populated the smaller islands of the antilles, that's was the tainos.

33 |

@xfernowolf

2 years ago

the history of my people need to be taught more thank you for this

402 |

@jamaalw8556

1 year ago

Man it would have been wild to be able to see the moment they met face to face

30 |

@cjrick329

2 years ago

My great grand mother was half Taino. I didn’t know this until last year. This part of history is very sad but extremely important to be aware of. Edit: funny how I made all of this up :)

557 |

@lovingsamantha9443

1 year ago

I remember hearing of Anacaona growing up. It’s extremely sad that Hispaniola had the worst history of slavery than any other colonized island. They died rapidly from abuse and disease. Then when replaced by African slaves, they faced extreme brutality by the French and Spanish. Rest In Peace ancestors

197 |

@Futuristbillpicone

6 months ago

My ancestors would be happy they are tearing down his statues in the US. I'm a proud Native from South America. My people are the Canaris from Ecuador 🇪🇨

5 |

@HistoryExplained

3 years ago

Epic History TV sent me here. This channel has amazing potential and will grow very fast! I’m looking forward to your future videos! ⭐️

43 |

@chefroxy6762

2 years ago

I can’t imagine anyone seeing Columbus and or the Spaniards and thought to themselves.. “they must be Gods” 🙄🙄

319 |

@nonameadames2493

6 months ago

😔😔, I was born in the US but as a kid I spent a few year in the Dominican Republic and got to go to school out there and remember hearing the stories about caonabo and ana caona

8 |

@avencebi

1 year ago

Having 20% Taino DNA myself I can say the blood still runs through us Puerto Ricans and other Caribbean people's. ✊🏽✊🏽✊🏽

85 |

@indigenouslife1841

2 years ago

Columbus was actually looking for the Maluku islands in the East Indies to colonize, not India. he was looking for the Moluccan spice islands but got lost and was sailing to Turtle island. That’s why native Americans are called Indians. European countries fought for the Moluccan spice monopoly that eventually came into Dutch hands. It made the Dutch VOC rich and powerful. (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie), the Dutch East India Company would be worth about $7.8 trillion today. Founded in 1602, it accomplished globalist capitalism some 400 years before everyone else did. the country we know as India then had a different name.

230 |

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