European settlements in the Caribbean begin with…
1492 CE to 1503 CE
European settlements in the Caribbean begin with Christopher Columbus.
Carrying an elaborate feudal commission that makes him perpetual governor of all lands discovered and gives him a percentage of all trade conducted, Columbus had sets sail in September 1492, determined to find a faster, shorter way than overland to China and Japan.
He plans to set up a trading-post empire, modeled after the successful Portuguese venture along the West African coast.
His aim is to establish direct commercial relations with the producers of spices and other luxuries of the fabled East, thereby cutting out the Arab middlemen who had monopolized trade since capturing Constantinople in 1453.
He also plans to link up with the lost Christians of Abyssinia, who are reputed to have large quantities of gold—a commodity in great demand in Europe.
Finally, as a good Christian, Columbus wants to spread Christianity to new peoples.