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Maybe she's piloting a plague ship to the harbors of southern europe
That's actually kind of terrible/funny. She sees her father dying, then flashes back to sailing a ship home from some infected port.
Maybe she's piloting a plague ship to the harbors of southern europe
I've been thinking on the two scenes in the trailer, one where the father dies of plague and hands a message to the daughter, then where the daughter is commanding a ship in a storm.
We really haven't been considering that those two scenes might be connected. So I've been thinking about what explorer could have set out after his/her father died of the plague.
I don't have any fully positive connections, but Vasco de Gama stands out. His father Estavio was originally supposed to lead the fleet around Africa to India, but he died before it could set sail and Vasco lead the expedition in his place. It could mean Portugal after all. The ships are similar to what Portugal would have been using at that time, and certainly not similar to later-Renaissance Dutch ships.
Anyone have any other ideas?

Did Magelan die from scurvy when he circumnavigated the globe. It could also point towards "historic moments". I'm not sure if both Portugal and the Netherlands would be included in the same game, but then again, who knows?![]()
He died in the Philippines as a result of a battle with some of the natives. I'm hoping the plague has something to with Italy, but Portugal could still be a possibility with the ship.Did Magelan die from scurvy when he circumnavigated the globe. It could also point towards "historic moments". I'm not sure if both Portugal and the Netherlands would be included in the same game, but then again, who knows?![]()
He died in the Philippines as a result of a battle with some of the natives. I'm hoping the plague has something to with Italy, but Portugal could still be a possibility with the ship.
Was maybe Genoan--we actually don't know too much about Columbus' life prior to his expedition to the New World. Genoa is certainly the most popular, but there are also prominent theories that he was Catalan, for example, and quite a few less popular theories attaching him to a number of other origins.I suggested somewhere that since the plague doctor is Italian (likely) and Columbus was an Italian that this could be Genoa or a version of Italy included.
...Is there such a theory?We don't know, but there's more evidence of him being Genoese than not. I would rank the Columbus is Catalan hypothesis right around the theory that Cyrus was not Persian/Aryan, but Elamite, in terms of likelihood.
(If there is, I imagine it comes from the fact that Elamite was used as the Persian court language from time to time, but I think it's far more likely that Cyrus was Median if he wasn't Persian: Median was also probably a Persian court language, though it's unattested except in some Old Persian loanwords.)
). 
...Is there such a theory?(If there is, I imagine it comes from the fact that Elamite was used as the Persian court language from time to time, but I think it's far more likely that Cyrus was Median if he wasn't Persian: Median was also probably a Persian court language, though it's unattested except in some Old Persian loanwords.)
And of course he's he's not Aryan. The Aryan's conquered India, and the evidence is certainly preponderant that Cyrus was a Zoroastrian from Iran (which of course doesn't rule out being Elamite--except he has an Iranian name).
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Was maybe Genoan--we actually don't know too much about Columbus' life prior to his expedition to the New World. Genoa is certainly the most popular, but there are also prominent theories that he was Catalan, for example, and quite a few less popular theories attaching him to a number of other origins.
If Columbus was born in what is today Catalonia, and you say he was Catalan, it is exacly the same that if I say that my all good buddy Trajan, was Murcian.
Then he should be Aragonese?
Didn't the Catalan language carry that name by the time of Columbus?If he was born in Barcelona, for example, yeap, he would have been Aragonese.
If think from a HRE point of view there was something like Italian. I‘m not sure if they thought so themselves. Certainly not for Sicily - calling that Italian seems a mostly 20th Century thought.Anyway, I am not certain how fine it is to call those "outer" cities "Italian" at that time.
Genoa, as much as Venice and Ragusa, were both ethnolinguistic and politically different in some ways.
Do some of you know if there was, back then, a consensus calling those Republics "Italian states", just like Tuscany or Sicily?
(and how about Milan and Savoy?)