Saturday, August 3, 2019
Amerigo Vespucci :: essays research papers
 Amerigo Vespucci      Amerigo Vespucci, an Italian explorer was born in Florence, Italy in the  year of 1454. Florence was a good city to grow up in for young Amerigo, because  of the growing interest in the field of exploration. Some of the adults told  young Amerigo about the wonders and riches of the Indies. Like the other Italian  boys in his village, undoubtedly Amerigo was fascinated with by those tales.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Amerigo lived in the Ognissanti section of Florence with a lot of the  Vespucci family. The Vespucci family was pretty well off, so Amerigo thought  that he was in line for a lot of money after his father's passing, but his  brother Antonio was highly favored over the rest of the children. Most of the  Vespuccis living with Amerigo were merchants dealing in wine, olive oil, or wool.  Not all of the Vespuccis were merchants, a small percentage of the Vespuccis  were bankers. All of the family liked art and learning, poetry and music just  like the rest of the Florentines. The ruler of these interesting Florentines was  Lorenzo de' Medicior, who was also know as Lorenzo the Magnificant.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  When Amerigo was older, but still a young man, his father Antastagio  Vespucci sent him to the Monestary of San Marco to study with his uncle Giorgio.  In his new school, Amerigo along with the other European boys learned Latin,  math, grammar, history, Italian and Greek Literature, geography and astronomy.  Amerigo learned to love astronomy, because he was fascinated about all of the  shapes the stars made, that his uncle called constellations. Amerigo thought  about traveling about the Earth, but he thought it to be impossible, because he  was tought in school that the equator was a ring of fire that made the waters  boil there.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Amerigo's hopes of traveling the world were become more realistic over  time. The first thing that sparked this was the invention of the caravel, a  light, narrow, 60 to 70 foot boat. The Portugese, that started making this boat  had learned to rig the caravels to sail well against the winds and currents of  the rough oceans. Another reality check occured when Amerigo was 19. What  happend was the Portugese finally sailed to the equator and found no boiling  seas, which proved the Roman theory that young Amerigo was taught in school  wrong. But then came a period in his life that Amerigo realized he would never    					    
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