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The European Advantage Large-scale farming, with animal labor leads to larger populations, complex societies, cities Advances in war technology (firearms, cannon, steel weapons Horses, for transportation and warfare Writing communication: written history; transfer of ideas Geography: Western hemiphere easier for trade, travel and transfer of information Immunity to diseases from livestock, such as small pox
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Spanish and Portuguese Explorers in the Americas in the 1500s Christopher Columbus to the Caribbean (aka West Indies) Native Population: Arawak, Taino Commodities: Gold briefly, then Sugar Hernan Cortez to Central Mexico Native Population: Aztec Commodity: Silver (Zacatecas mine) Francisco Pizarro to Peru, Bolivia (Andes Mountains) Native Population: Inca, Quechua, Aymara Commodity: Gold and Silver (Potosi mine) Pedro Alvarez Cabral to Brazil Native Population: Tupi, Tupuia Commodity: Sugar
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Spain and Portugal Divide the World
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Spanish Encomienda System The “encomienda” was the name of the social system that the Spanish transplanted to their holdings in the New World. The land holders were called “encomenderos.” Spanish conquistadors, settlers, priests or colonial officials were given a grant of land, which included all native cities, towns, communities or families that lived there. The natives provided tribute in the form of gold or silver, crops and foodstuffs, animals such as pigs or llamas or anything else the land produced.
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The Encomienda System The natives could also be made to work for a certain amount of time, say on a sugarcane plantation or in a mine. In return, the owner, or encomendero, was responsible for the well-being of his subjects and was to see to it that they were converted and educated about Christianity.
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Spanish Mines When the Spanish discovered silver in the New World, they opened mines and forced the native people to work in them. Two infamous mines were – Zacatecas, in Mexico – Potosi, in Bolivia When they ran out of native workers, they brought African slaves to work in the mines. Conditions in the mines were horrendous; tens of thousands died.
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1500-1800 CE 80 – 95 % of the indigenous (“native”) population of the Americas dies from disease and forced servitude 10 million enslaved Africans shipped to Americas to work on plantations and in mines Spain, and then other European countries become rich, and European culture begins to dominate
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Spanish Mission in the Americas God Gold Glory
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Bartolome de las Casas 1484-1566: Human Rights Activist Went to the New World as an explorer and soldier After witnessing the brutal treatment of the natives, became a Dominican friar Named the “Protector of the Indians” Responsible for the New Laws (1542) protecting the natives…which were ignored by the land and mine owners.
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The Great Dying Accident? OR Genocide?
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http://www.slavevoyages.org/tast/assessment /intro-maps.faces History of Atlantic Slave Trade in Maps
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