Do you know the legend of the Duhare? It is assumed that they were a group of Native Americans who occupied regions today belonging to the North American states of Georgia and South Carolina, of white complexion, clear eyes and possible Irish origin, present in America before the arrival of Colon in the New World./p>
Here we present the data for you to judge for yourself if it is a historical fact or an Irish story.
The Duhare: red-haired and light-eyed Native Americans
Pedro Martir de Angleria (1457-1526) was an Italian humanist at the service of the Catholic Monarchs, who today is especially remembered for being one of the chroniclers of the first travelers of the Indies.Martir compiled reports and conducted interviews for the elaboration in Latin of his work De Orbe Novo Decades Octo ("The Eight Decades of the New World"), published in 1530, and in which the existence of a town, near the Atlantic coast of North America, which differed markedly e of the others.
Spanish explorers who were on the coast of Georgia and South Carolina spoke of a group of natives, the Duhare , remarkably different from those around them.The color of the dominant hair, which reached their heels, went from brown to redhead, they were light-skinned and their tongue had nothing to do with those of other Native Americans.

The Duhare also handled deer herds in the same way as Europeans, cattle: they kept young animals to ensure that adults stayed close, and ordered the deer.
These data have served to feed the theory that it would be a group of Irishmen who would have arrived in America before Colon.According to the testimony collected by Pedro Martir, the natives were tall and ruled by a re and called Datha, taller than the others and with skin full of tattoos and paintings.
For supporters of the theory of an Irish origin of the Duhare, this last fact would be extremely significant, since the former Celtic chiefs also used to tattoo and paint to stand out from the rest of the tribe .
There has also been talk of possible similarities between the language of the Duhare and the Gaelic.Gaelico duhare could mean “painted.”
However there is no chronicle in Ireland that speaks of some kind of migration to the New World, at least not any likelihood, and there is nothing in the DNA studies conducted in Recent years that link some branch of the Native Americans with the Celtic peoples who occupied Ireland, so for some it is only a myth, without a true endorsement of archeology.

What increasingly makes more sense and certainty is that Christopher Columbus was not the first to step on American lands, as we explain in the articles Did the Vikings arrive? before Colon to America ?, or the Templars ?, or perhaps the Chinese?
Images: Tony Hisgett, OZinOH, Commons Wikimedia
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