Silver Haitian Treasure and Columbus's Journeys After His Death

@thebighigg · 2025-07-28 17:59 · Olio di Balena

During the 1990's I was a bit of a nomad and adventurer which I've discussed before. I've always been a coin collector as well every since I was a child. So while I was travelling I tended to pick up coins from the places I visited. I have visited most of the islands/countries in the Caribbean with the exception of extremely small islands, Cuba (as a US citizen I wasn't allowed), the Caymans (too expensive) and Haiti which was even back then was a little too dangerous for my liking.

At one point while I was living in Miami for a few months, I did manage to pick up a few coins from Haiti as well as several other islands. Today's featured coin comes from Haiti and celebrates ten years since their revolution. It also featured and commemorates Columbus's first expedition to the Americas.

About the coin:


From numista.com

The coin is pure silver and a proof coin meant to be collectible and not circulated. I really like the three ships on the obverse (front) of the coin along with the island of Hispaniola. The island today is divided into Haiti and the Dominican Republic. It does have some oxidation issues probably from being stored in the Caribbean or Miami for several years, and I got a great deal on it as silver was cheap back in the 1990's.

So today, rather than talk about Haiti, I thought I would focus on Columbus. Not so much his journeys in life, but the journeys his corpse made posthumously.

Christopher Columbus

Interestingly, there are no known portraits of Columbus from his lifetime. Some were made posthumously, so we really don't know exactly what he looked like. So in this case I won't be adding any portraits to get started.

Christopher Columbus I have discussed in other posts. He wasn't the first to discover the Americas, but after he did discover it, it stayed discovered and was a world changing event. The coin above celebrates his first voyage sailing the three ships: Niña, Pinta and Santa María. To be honest, that voyage would have taken a lot of courage to sail into the unknown with the very real possibility of death along the way. I'm not sure I would have have joined him!

In 1893 in Chicago, Illinois, US there was a 400th anniversary celebration that included replica ships sailed from Spain. Below you can see an actual photo of the ships, I hadn't seen it before.


E. Benjamin Andrews
Replicas of the Niña, Pinta and Santa María that sailed from Spain to Chicago in 1893 to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Columbus's first voyage.

But today my focus isn't so much on his journeys in life, but his complicated journeys that occurred after he died.

Where is Columbus Buried?

Christopher Columbus made it know before his death that he wished to be buried on the island of Hispaniola. He died at age 54 in Valladolid, Spain in1506. His remains were initially interred at Chapel of Wonders at Convent of St. Francis, Valladolid. However, his son Diego had the body moved to monastery of La Cartuja in Seville, Spain. From there he may have been moved to Seville Cathedral around 1513.

In 1536 the remains of both Columbus and his son Diego were moved to the cathedral in Santo Domingo, in the modern day Dominican Republic. Finally he had arrived to his desired place of burial. But the tale doesn't end there... In 1793 the French took over Hispaniola, which prompted the moving of his remains to Havana, Cuba.

Cuba then became independent after the Spanish-American War in 1898. At that time at least some of his remains were relocated to Seville Cathedral in Seville, Spain. They were placed in an elaborate tomb as Columbus was an important historical figure and Spanish hero. Those remains were examined in 2003 and DNA samples extracted. They also obtained DNA samples from Columbus's brother Diego, and his youngest son Fernando. The DNA was very badly degraded, but from the strands of mitochondrial DNA (which is passed exclusively mother to son/daughter) they were able to match them to his brother Diego. So the remains in Seville appear to be legitimate.


pinterest.com
Columbus's remains carried on the shoulders of the four sculptures

But the story doesn't end there. In 1877 a priest in Santo Domingo found an old lead box with a leg and arm bones, and was labeled as belonging to Columbus. In 1913 a US physician indicated the remains seemed to legitimate. How he did so without the aid of DNA makes his assessment sole guess work at best in my personal opinion. Notwithstanding, the remains were interred in Columbus Lighthouse in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The government has refused testing on the remains repeatedly, so are they real? Are they his son's remains? No one can really say until testing is done at some point, which may never happen. An additional issue is the humidity of the Caribbean may more rapidly degrade DNA, so are there any usable samples left?


dreamstime.com
Tomb inside of Christopher Columbus Lighthouse

That ends the mystery of Columbus's remains (for now anyway), definitely some in Seville, and maybe some in the Dominican Republic. His journey after death is almost more complicated than his four expeditions during his lifetime.

That will wrap up my post for today, thank you for taking the time to check it out. Please feel free to leave any comments or questions below. Thank you everyone for all of your support, it is truly appreciated. Have a great week everyone!

References:

https://en.numista.com/catalogue/pieces28187.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Columbus

Disclaimer

I am not a financial planner and this isn't financial advice. Please always do your own research before investing your money. You worked hard enough to earn it!

All photos are my own except where indicated.

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