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Chapter 1 – New Beginnings
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“Believe in the Greatness of America”
Animaniacs - Presidents “The News Room” “We can’t solve our problems until we recognize that there is a problem” Presidential Morph - American Pops
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Chapter 1. New World Beginnings
A. The 1st Americans cross land bridge over Bering Sea 1. 50 to 20 thousand years ago—Siberian hunters became first American inhabitants 2. 14,000 years ago—humans reached tip of South America B. Pre-Columbian civilizations – “American Indians” 1. 10 to 75 million people a. South America – Incas b. Central America – Mayas (Yucatan) and Aztecs (Mexico) c. North America - Iroquois (NY), Cherokee (South), Mississippians, Pueblo (Southwest)
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Routes of the First Americans
04/06/98 Routes of the First Americans back 2 2 2 2
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Locations of Major Indian Groups and Culture Areas in the 1600s
04/06/98 Locations of Major Indian Groups and Culture Areas in the 1600s back 4 4 4 4
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C. European Arrivals CE - Norse Vikings (Erik the Red, Leif Erikson) in Newfoundland (Canada) CE – Christopher Columbus (Spain) “discovered” island of Hispaniola – mistakenly called people “Indians” CE – John Cabot (England) explored northern America (Newfoundland) CE – Amerigo Vespucci (Spain) mapped east coast of South America CE – Pedro Cabral claimed Brazil for Portugal CE – Juan Ponce de Leon (Spain) Puerto Rico; 1513 – Florida searching for “Fountain of Youth” CE – Vasco de Balboa (Spain) – first European to see Pacific Ocean CE – Ferdinand Magellan (Spain) – first to sail around S. America 9. Spain was first to seek empire – “God, Gold, and Glory”
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Voyages of European Exploration
04/06/98 back 16 17 17 17
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D. Treaty of Tordesillas – 1494
1. decision by Pope to settle disputed claims of Portugal and Spain 2. divided Spanish and Portuguese territory in “New World” North-South by 46th meridian 3. Portugal got land east of line – Brazil and African islands 4. Spain got land west of line – everything else
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E. New Spain 1. Spanish explorers – Conquistadors and Missionaries conquered Caribbean, C. & S. America a – Hernan Cortes conquered Aztecs (Chief Montezuma) in Tenochtitlan; est. Mexico City 1535 – Francisco Pizarro conquered Incas in Peru, est. city of Lima —de Soto explored Southeast (U.S.) —Coronado explored Southwest (U.S.)
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2. Spain est. Encomienda System of govt. in New Spain
a. Large tracts of land given to Spanish conquerors b. Indigenous inhabitants became property of conquerors; forced labor on sugar plantations; to be converted to Catholicism c. Considered inhumane/slavery by church; replaced by Repartimiento system d. Conquistadores inter-married w/Indian women – “new race” called mestizos – cultural and biological bridge between Spain and indigenous Americans
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3. Columbian Exchange transforms life on 3 continents
a. From the New World (America) to the Old – corn, potatoes, tobacco, beans, peppers, manioc, pumpkin, squash, tomato, wild rice, etc. b. From the Old World to the New 1. cows, pigs, horses, wheat, sugar cane, apples, cabbage, citrus, carrots, Kentucky bluegrass, etc. 2. devastating diseases (smallpox, yellow fever, malaria), as Indians had no immunities – An estimated 90% of all pre-Columbus Indians died, mostly due to disease. c. From Africa to New World – slave labor to work sugar plantations with loss of Indian population
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4. Other Europeans threaten Spanish dominance
a. England (1497): John Cabot (an Italian who sailed for England) touched the coast of the current day U.S. b. France (1524): Giovanni de Verrazano also touched on the North American seaboard. France (1535): Jacques Cartier went into mouth of St. Lawrence River (Canada). France (1608) —Samuel de Champlain founded Québec France (1679): Robert de LaSalle sailed down the Mississippi River claiming the whole region for their King Louis and naming the area "Louisiana" after his king. French empire included St. Lawrence River, Great Lakes, Mississippi 1. Very few permanent settlements – only fur trading posts 2. Fur trade with Indian trading partners very profitable
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5. To oppose threats, Spain set up forts (presidios) up California coast, and St. Augustine, Florida (1565) – the oldest continually inhabited European settlement in the U.S. This fanciful artist's rendition of St. Augustine, pioneer Spanish settlement, is of interest despite its historical inaccuracies. The Castillo de San Marcos at no time resembled the fort as portrayed. The artist probably included the high hills because he mistook the Spanish word for thick forests to mean hills. From the 1671 engraving "Pagus Hispanorum," by an unknown artist, probably prepared in Amsterdam. (Courtesy, Chicago Historical Society.)
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6. Black Legend: the false notion that Spaniards only brought bad things (murder, disease, slavery); though true, they also brought good things: legal systems, architecture, Christianity, language, civilization
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