The Story Of The Bouncing Bones!
Independent (United Kingdom)
By Elizabeth Nash in Madrid
16 April 2002

At last, DNA may reveal the truth of Columbus tomb

Tomb_of_Columbus.jpg (176004 bytes)Scientists plan to exhume the remains of Christopher Columbus in Seville Cathedral to make sure they are really his. They suspect the  body held aloft by four sculpted figures representing the ancient kingdoms of Spain might actually be of his son Diego, removed from the Dominican Republic centuries ago by mistake.

Click on photo for a larger view

A team led by a forensic scientist at the University of Granada  proposes to compare the DNA with the remains of another son,  Fernando, who is also buried in Seville Cathedral. A positive result  would end 125 years of dispute over whether the man who  "discovered" America truly rests in the city from where he set sail in  1492, or in Santo Domingo, where he made his historic landfall in  the New World.

The idea was proposed by Marcial Castro Sanchez, a genealogist  and history teacher at a secondary school near Seville. He was inspired by the work of the Oxford-based geneticist Brian Sykes on  DNA testing across generations to resolve unanswered historical  questions. "I realized this technique could be applied to Christopher  Columbus, so I went with 18 of my pupils to visit Jose Antonio  Lorete Acosta at his Laboratory of Genetic Identification at Granada  University, and he was delighted to help," Mr. Castro said. "The  professor pondered the problem for years but hadn't known how to  solve it."

Columbus died in the Spanish city of Valladolid in 1506, and his  body was buried first in Seville's Carthusian monastery, then  transferred to Santo Domingo Cathedral at the request of his son  Diego's widow.

There he remained until 1795, when the Caribbean island fell into French hands and Spaniards excavated the tomb near the altar and  shipped the bones to Havana, a Spanish colony. Mr. Castro says: "Since Christopher was buried near Diego, it's possible the wrong  remains were removed."

 Doubts arose in 1877 when builders replacing the paving slabs of  Santo Domingo Cathedral uncovered a lead box bearing the  inscription: "Illustrious and enlightened male Don Cristobal Colon."

It contained 41 bone fragments and a bullet possibly left in a wound  during the explorer's youth. Next to the tomb was a box inscribed   with the name of Luis, a grandson who died in Algeria. Some  experts say his remains never reached the Caribbean.

In 1898, when Cuba fell to the Americans, Spaniards again salvaged  Columbus's supposed remains and brought them to Seville  Cathedral, where his son Fernando also lies. An analysis of nuclear  DNA would establish connections between direct family members,  and analysis of mitocondrial DNA could prove links with maternal   descendants, of whom there is a sprawling family. Mr. Castro said  they were trying to raise money for the project.

"Even if we found the remains weren't him, it wouldn't matter,  because his tomb would be just as important as a cenotaph in his  honor. There shouldn't be any difficulty about exhuming the  remains. After all, he's been dug up nine times already."

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