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ZenLefty

(20,924 posts)
Wed Mar 28, 2012, 11:02 AM Mar 2012

I always thought that I was pretty good at geography.

But it just dawned on me today that your state is very obviously not an island and you call it an island anyway. I always knew it wasn't an island. I always knew it was called Rhode Island. But just now I put the two together. What is up with that? Why the deceit?

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I always thought that I was pretty good at geography. (Original Post) ZenLefty Mar 2012 OP
This sounds like a Seinfeld dialogue Sanity Claws Mar 2012 #1
Yeah, well, I've got a beef with the name 'Pennsylvania'! Cirque du So-What Mar 2012 #2
I know! And Colorado isn't red either. ZenLefty Mar 2012 #4
Never thought of it either. Here's the Wiki entry - pinto Mar 2012 #3
That sounds like a cover up. ZenLefty Mar 2012 #5

Sanity Claws

(22,028 posts)
1. This sounds like a Seinfeld dialogue
Wed Mar 28, 2012, 11:05 AM
Mar 2012

What's up with that?

You're right. Whoever named it seemed to be geographically-challenged.

Cirque du So-What

(27,473 posts)
2. Yeah, well, I've got a beef with the name 'Pennsylvania'!
Wed Mar 28, 2012, 11:07 AM
Mar 2012

Having lived there, I can attest to the fact that it's not continuous forest and that it doesn't all belong to William Penn.

pinto

(106,886 posts)
3. Never thought of it either. Here's the Wiki entry -
Wed Mar 28, 2012, 11:10 AM
Mar 2012

Despite the name, most of Rhode Island is on the mainland United States. The official name of the state, Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, derives from the merger of two colonies. Rhode Island colony was founded near present-day Newport, on what is now commonly called Aquidneck Island, the largest of several islands in Narragansett Bay. Providence Plantations was the name of the colony founded by Roger Williams in the area now known as the City of Providence.[9]

It is unclear how Aquidneck Island came to be known as Rhode Island, although there are two popular theories.

The explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano, in 1524 noted the presence of an island near the mouth of Narragansett Bay, which he likened to the Greek island of Rhodes. However, subsequent European explorers were unable to precisely identify the island that Verrazzano had named. Nevertheless, the Pilgrims who later colonized the area assumed that Verrazzano's "Rhodes" was Aquidneck.

A second theory concerns the fact that Adriaen Block, during his expeditions in the 1610s, passed by Aquidneck, described in a 1625 account of his travels as "an island of reddish appearance" (in 17th-century Dutch, "een rodlich Eylande&quot .[10] Historians have theorized that this "reddish appearance" resulted from either red autumn foliage or red clay on portions of the shore.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhode_Island#Origin_of_the_name

(ed for spell)

ZenLefty

(20,924 posts)
5. That sounds like a cover up.
Wed Mar 28, 2012, 11:29 AM
Mar 2012

I suspect that poor mapping skills in the 16th century are to blame.

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