Abstract

Common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), maize, and squash were described by explorers as early as 1492. The illustration of common bean recognized as the first in Europe is in Fuchs’ Di Historias Stirpium, published in 1542 and a half-century after beans were observed in the Caribbean. Besides herbals and herbarium specimens, the sources of information on the introduction of New World crops are paintings and illustrations. Two early sources of images of maize and squash are the Grandes Heures d’Anne de Bretagne and the Loggia di Amore e Psiche in the Villa Farnesina, Rome. The former was illustrated between 1507 and 1508 and has an image identified as the common bean. The Villa Farnesina Loggia was decorated in 1515–1518, with festoons containing three instances of bean pods. Our first objective was to evaluate these images to determine whether they represented depictions of common bean earlier than the illustration by Fuchs. Neither image appears to be a common bean based on a combination of botanical characters and size. Folio 194 of the Grandes Heures d’Anne de Bretagne is most likely a Vigna species in the Ceratotropis subgenus. In the Loggia, one set of pods appears to be a species in the Mimosoideae subfamily and the second and third sets of pods most closely resemble Canavalia gladiata. Neither image likely represents common beans and are probably Old-World species. Secondly, illustrations of common beans from ten early herbals were analyzed for traits that are characteristic of the centers of domestication and races of common beans. Our objective was to characterize the diversity observed among herbals and determine whether beans from both centers of domestication were present. We potentially identified both Middle American, race Mesoamerica and Andean, race Nueva Granada types. We posit that both Middle American and Andean types were in the Caribbean at the time of the Columbian exchange and that beans from both centers were informally introduced into Europe early on. This review of 16th-century manuscripts and illustrations has provided some answers to the questions of what and when common beans reached Europe and provide new hypotheses for researchers studying the origins, diversity, and distribution of this crop.

Highlights

  • IntroductionAlmost immediately upon arrival into the Caribbean in 1492, Christopher Columbus and his men observed the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean growing crops different from what they were accustomed to in southern Europe

  • We find that the first hard evidence of the introduction of beans into Europe comes from 1532 and thereafter and that the visual evidence from prior to 1530 that has entered the literature does not represent common beans

  • The gap in time between when common beans were first observed in the Americas and when they entered the literature in Europe is similar to when maize and squash were observed, and when scholarly works were published on these crops

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Summary

Introduction

Almost immediately upon arrival into the Caribbean in 1492, Christopher Columbus and his men observed the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean growing crops different from what they were accustomed to in southern Europe. The 4th of November 1492 entry in Columbus’ navigation journal (Anonymous, 1892) indicated that the inhabitants of Cuba “. . .have cowpeas and broad beans more diverse than ours. “Faxones” is most likely a reference to common beans because of the similarity in appearance to cowpeas (Vigna unguiculata) whereas “habas” was probably the larger, flatterseeded lima bean that is more similar in size and shape to broad beans (Vicia faba) (Hammer, 1992). A second journal entry on November 6 repeats the same phrase. In his final voyage in 1502, Columbus arrived on the Central American coast of presentday Honduras and encountered beans as a staple food crop that were red and white in color as recounted by his son, Ferdinand (Sauer, 1966)

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