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Introduction: The World Transformed

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1 Introduction: The World Transformed
Introduction: The World Transformed

2 Transformation By a “Booming” world market- stimulated movement of goods Unintended cons.- enterprise of Piracy spread other European culture 1500s- 200,000 Spanish people (10% women) migrated to Latin America 1600’s- comparable numbers of English, French and Dutch did the same to North America These immigrants became a “ruling elite” that diffused their culture into the New World- cities with grid patterns, churches at the centre of all urban planning…and so on.

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5 European Culture Spreads
Immigrants: language, religion, livestock, tools, plants, horses- totally transforming the lives of the native people’s- what else?? Plants- intentional and unintentional- wheat came with traditional farming methods (vs. Three Sisters) Ecological alterations- diseases, invasive plants (unintentional)- mustard, mint, endives and spinach, dandelions Africa- Europeans brought sweet potatoes and maize East Asia kept Europeans at arms length- therefore less influenced by European culture or ecology

6 Population Immigrants settled “among” native socities- men outnumbered women- the result???? Mestizos (Metis) See Festival Scene…

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10 European Culture Transformed
Europeans were transformed as well by the contact with the new world/people’s- Syphilis (ravaged Europe till the 1900’s)- positive and negative- actual helped develop the “safe sex” attitude that started to exist (finally) in the late 1920’s European diet changed- Imagine Ireland without Potatoes or Italians without Tomatoes Maize transformed European diet later but changed agriculture- animal feed and peasant food (Italians and Polenta) Luxuries/stimulants- Chocolate (Aztec Mexico- Europeans drank it), Tea (from Asia), Coffee (early 16th century- from Africa in was popular in Venice) Social life changes due to these stimulants (coffee shops 1600s) But the biggest impression was…

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12 Tobacco Columbus saw Amerindians smoking it First cultivated in Europe for medicinal purposes- by mid 1600s it had reached China (where EVERYONE took up the habit) Now for this: cultivating Tobacco is hard without chemicals so people had to constantly annex and seek out new lands to cultivate; a drive for more land- more transformation Big influence on the commercial revolution- movement of goods all over the world, creating demand, which fuels more explorations and commerce- the original stimulus was for access to spices

13 A New Worldview False, highly imaginative original view of what Europeans would find- it proved to be bigger and more diverse than expected Increased expeditions (Europeans were fascinated by the exotic) of scientific purpose which will ultimately lead to Darwin New World Maps- much more realistic view of the world than ever before- Flemish cartographer Mercator in 1569 What does this map show about European attitudes


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