Santa María ship, Funchal, Madeira, Portugal, Africa
This magnificent replica of
Christopher Columbus's
Flag ship "
The Santa Maria " was built on the island of
Madeira, between July
1997 and
Jully 1998, in the fishing village of
Camara de Lobos by
Robert Wijntje, a dutchman and by local craftsmen. In 1998, the
Santa Maria represented the
Madeira Wine Expo 98 in
Lisbon, where she was visited by 97.
016 people in only 25 days. Since then thousands more have sailed and continue to sail aboard the Santa Maria, experiencing more than just a normal boat ride. The Santa Maria is also the most photographed boat in Madeira.
Various television documentries both local and international have been made on board this famous boat, including
Discovery Channel "The quest for
Columbus". The idea of this boat trip is to feel the history, while at the same time enjoying the breathtaking views of Madeira´s south coast. This really enjoyable trip is done on a daily basis, twice a day and sails off from the harbor in Funchal. The tour lasts for 3 hours and the sighting of dolphins and whales is imminent. A great attention to detail was given to everything aboard the boat.
Sailing along the coast of Madeira in the Santa Maria will undoubtably take you back to the
15th century.
Join us aboard the Santa Maria and re-live
Cristopher Columbus´s voyage of discovery and imagine how he and his crew felt as they headed into the unknown.
La Santa María de la
Inmaculada Concepción (
Spanish for The
Holy Mary of the
Immaculate Conception), or La Santa María, was the largest of the three ships used by Christopher Columbus in his first voyage. Her master and owner was
Juan de la Cosa. The Santa
María was built in
Pontevedra,
Galicia, in
Spain's north-west region. The Santa María was probably a medium-sized nau (carrack), about 58 ft (17.7 m) long on deck, and according to
Juan Escalante de
Mendoza in 1575, the Santa Maria was "very little larger than
100 toneladas" (about 100 tons, or tuns) burthen, or burden, and was used as the flagship for the expedition. The Santa María had a single deck and three masts.
The other ships of the Columbus expedition were the bigger caravel-type ships
Santa Clara, remembered as La
Niña ("
The Girl"), and La Pinta ("The
Painted"). All these ships were second-hand (if not third- or more) and were not intended for exploration. The Niña, Pinta, and the
Santa María were modest-sized merchant vessels comparable in size to a modern cruising yacht. The exact measurements of length and width of the three ships have not survived, but good estimates of their burden capacity can be judged from contemporary anecdotes written down by one or more of
Columbus' crew members, and contemporary
Spanish and Portuguese shipwrecks from the late 15th and early
16th centuries which are comparable in size to that of the Santa Maria. These include the ballast piles and keel lengths of the
Molasses Reef Wreck and Highborn Cay
Wreck in the
Bahamas. Both were caravel vessels 19 m (62 ft) in length overall, 12.6 m (41 ft) keel length and 5 to
5.7 m (16 to 19 ft) in width, and rated between 100 and
150 tons burden. The Santa María, being Columbus' largest ship, was only about this size, and the Niña and Pinta were smaller, at only 50 to 75 tons burden and perhaps 15 to 18 meters (50 to 60 feet) on deck (updated dimensional estimates are discussed below in the section entitled
Replicas). A Spanish vessel in those days was given an official religious name, but was generally known by a nickname, oftentimes a feminine form of either her master's patronymic, or of her home port.
Bartolomé de Las Casas, a priest and historian who extensively chronicled Columbus' expeditions, never used the name Santa María in his writings, and instead called the ship La Capitana ("flagship") or La Nao. Indeed, Columbus himself, in his detailed logs, only called it La Capitana. Some claim that the ship was known to her sailors as Marigalante ("
Gallant Maria"), but that nickname was in fact given to the Santa María 's namesake replacement, used on
Columbus's second voyage. With three masts, she was the slowest of Columbus' vessels but performed well in the
Atlantic crossing. Then on the return trip, on
24 December (
1492), not having slept for two days, Columbus decided at
11:00 p.m. to lie down to sleep. The night being calm, the steersman also decided to sleep, leaving only a cabin boy to steer the ship, a practice which the admiral had always strictly forbidden. With the boy at the helm, the currents carried the ship onto a sandbank, running her aground off the present-day site of
Cap-Haïtien, Haiti. It sank the next day. Realizing that the ship was beyond repair, Columbus ordered his men to strip the timbers from the ship. The timbers were later used to build a fort which Columbus called
La Navidad (
Christmas) because the wreck occurred on
Christmas Day, north from the modern town of
Limonade (see map, and the photograph).