Columbia is the first
popular and
poetic name for the
United States of America; it's also the origin of the name for the
District of Columbia, the
federal district which is coextensive with the U.S.
capital, Washington. A
feminine form derived from
Christopher Columbus, who is generally considered to have discovered the
New World upon first visiting the
Americas in 1492, the moniker dates from before the
American Revolution in
1776 but fell out of use in the early
20th Century. Exceptions to this trend include the song "
Columbia, Gem of the Ocean," still occasionally sung, and the song "
Hail, Columbia," an early
anthem of the United States now used as the anthem of the
Vice President of the United States. It is still featured as
CBS's former legal name, the
Columbia Broadcasting System,
Columbia University in
New York,
Columbia Pictures, and the
space shuttle Columbia.
Christopher Columbus wasn't considered a hero of the 13 American colonies until the mid-
18th century and the growing feeling of nationalism among the colonies. The
English had always emphasized
John Cabot and
Sebastian Cabot, and downplayed Columbus, for political reasons. But, for the emerging United States, the Cabots made poor national heroes and were "shadowy agents of a
British king", while
Spain no longer posed a serious threat. The new nation began to look back to Columbus as a founding hero, and with that change of attitude, the name Columbia became increasingly popular.
Advocates for naming the United States "Columbia" continued to press for the name even after the
United States Constitution was ratified. According to
George R. Stewart, the name "United States" was criticized for being too long, inaccurate, and unpoetic, and that the
Constitutional Convention of
1787 would have been the ideal time to change it. The two people most likely to have argued for a better name, according to Stewart, were
Thomas Jefferson and
Benjamin Franklin. But Jefferson was in France at the time and Franklin was old and "no longer vigorous." Thus the nation remained the "United States," but popular support for "Columbia" remained and the name was given to many
counties, towns, and
townships.
In
1791, the year before the 300th
anniversary of Columbus' first voyage to the
Americas in
1492 and the first U.S. celebrations of
Columbus Day, three commissioners that President
George Washington had appointed named the future federal district that would become the seat of the U.S. government "the
Territory of Columbia". In 1792 itself, the
Columbia River received its name. Just before the Constitutional Convention, in
1786,
South Carolina gave the name "Columbia" to its new
capital city.
The proper noun "Columbia" is a name widely used in
English derived from that of Christopher Columbus. Therefore, it was used in a broader sense to refer to the Americas. The term "
Pre-Columbian" refers to the time before the arrival in the Americas of Columbus and other
European
explorers.
Columbia was also a female
national personification of America, similar to the male
Uncle Sam, the
British female
Britannia and male
John Bull, the
Italian Italia Turrita and the
French Marianne, often seen in
political cartoons through the early 20th century (
see illustration at right).
The term
Columbian was used to mean "from the USA" and there have been suggestions that it should be used again as an
alternative word for "American", but hasn't re-entered general use. The establishment of a
"Republic of Colombia" in 1819 (followed by the
United States of Colombia in 1863, and finally the modern Republic of
Colombia in 1886) may have resulted in
Columbia "no longer being available as a national name" for the United States. Anglophones commonly misspell Colombia as "Columbia", and usually pronounce both names identically.
Modern appearances
The character is still used by
Columbia Pictures as part of their logo, though the current incarnation looks very different.
Columbia also makes an appearance in
Uncle Sam, a graphic novel about American history.
External results
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