Easter: where the name of the state of Florida comes from and what it has to do with this religious celebration
The first European -of which there is a record- to approach the shores of what is now the United States was the Spanish explorer and adventurer Juan Ponce de León.
According to legend, Ponce de León, then governor of Puerto Rico, ventured to sail north in search of the fountain of eternal youth.
Between April 2nd and 8th 675, the Spanish explorer and his crew waded through the coastal waters of the center of what is now the state of Florida, more or less at the height of the current city of St. Augustine .
In addition to the impressive and flourishing vegetation he found, the date coincided that year with the celebration of Easter -the end of Holy Week- reasons why it is said that Ponce de León gave it the name of Florida with which that state is known today.
The name was kept despite r of the various attempts at exploration and colonization by other powers of the time.
But how true is that story?
“Romantic myth”
It may be partly true, but “it is a somewhat romantic myth” , comments Jack Davis, professor of history and director of the Rothman Family Humanities Center at the University of Florida, in Gainesville.
“Our past is decorated with these kinds of legends.”
Although it is not ruled out that other Europeans sighted the coast of present-day Florida, as far as is known, Ponce de León was the first to sail along the east coast of the territory.
But it did not reach the height of St. Augustine, “although the people of that city like to say yes,” says Professor Davis. Rather, it reached Merritt Island, near Cape Canaveral.
The expedition had not gone in search of the fountain of eternal youth either, a legend that had been circulating for several years among explorers who probably searched for it in different regions of the New World, but there is no evidence that this was Ponce de León’s goal.
“The king’s decree was to find precious metals -gold and silver- as well as slaves“, says Jack Davis. “The enslaved population of Puerto Rico had decreased significantly due to overwork and diseases brought by the Europeans.”