. History of the discovery and conquest of Costa Rica . try by theSpaniards reached barely 27,200, distributed asfollows: Corobicis and Votos, 900; Borucas, orBruncas, 1,000; Chorotegas, 13,200; Nahuas, or 22 HISTORY OF DISCOVERY AND Aztecs, 400; Caribs, 11,700 (3,500 Guetares and8,200 Viceitas). At first sight these figures ap-pear to be too small when compared with thestories told by the conquistadores, who speak ofgreat numbers of Indians; but on this point ac-count must be taken of the tendency of theSpaniards to exaggerate in their reports of therichness and population of the conquered co
. History of the discovery and conquest of Costa Rica . try by theSpaniards reached barely 27,200, distributed asfollows: Corobicis and Votos, 900; Borucas, orBruncas, 1,000; Chorotegas, 13,200; Nahuas, or 22 HISTORY OF DISCOVERY AND Aztecs, 400; Caribs, 11,700 (3,500 Guetares and8,200 Viceitas). At first sight these figures ap-pear to be too small when compared with thestories told by the conquistadores, who speak ofgreat numbers of Indians; but on this point ac-count must be taken of the tendency of theSpaniards to exaggerate in their reports of therichness and population of the conquered coun-tries in order to enhance the importance of theirpersonal achievements. In contrast with this,all the docmnents of the colonial period speakof the scarcity of the Indians, and these latterstatements are confirmed by the fact that thereare to-day in Costa Rica very few pure repre-sentatives of the aboriginal races, which is thereverse of the condition existing in other coun-tries of Central America that were conqueredand governed in the same CHAPTER II Discovery of the Atlantic Coast of Costa RicaBY Christopher Columbus—Indian Village ofCariay and the Island of Quiribri—CharacterAND Condition of the Inhabitants—The Bay ofZorobaró—Veragua TEN years had passed since the dawn of that12th day of October, 1492, when hke anapparition the island of Guanahani arosebefore Columbus out of the dread Sea of Dark-ness—ten years prolific in discoveries. Ha}i;i,Cuba, Porto Rico, Jamaica, Martinique, Trini-dad and many others of the Antilles made theirappearance in succession before the caravels ofthe dauntless navigator; and finally, on the 1stof August, 1498, the last veil that had shroudedthe mystery of the new world had been tornasunder and, in its turn, the American continenthad burst from the immensity of the Atlantic,greeting him with one of its marvels, the deltaof the Orinoco. The great man, however, did not know that hehad come upon a new world; he always believ
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