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Chapter 1: Worlds in Motion 1450–1550

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1 Chapter 1: Worlds in Motion 1450–1550
Of the People Chapter 1: Worlds in Motion 1450–1550

2 Common Threads >> What role did the colonies play in imperial conflict? That is, how did they shape that conflict and how were they shaped by it? >> How were Native Americans drawn into imperial conflict? To what extent were they able to shape it for their own purposes? >> What did it mean for the American colonies to be peripheral— literally— to the British Empire? >> How did the colonists adapt the available political theories to their purposes? What in the American experience made those theories attractive to the colonists?

3 Worlds in Motion 1450-1550 Overview The World of the Indian Peoples
The Worlds of Christopher Columbus Worlds in Collision The Biological Consequences of Conquest Onto the Mainland

4 Worlds in Motion 1450-1550 The World of the Indian Peoples
The Archaic Indians The Indians of the Eastern Woodlands The Indians of the Plains The Indians of the Deserts The Indians of the Pacific Coast The Great Civilizations of the Americas

5 Worlds in Motion 1450-1550 The Worlds of Christopher Columbus
European Nations in the Age of Discovery The Political Economy of Europe The World of the West African Peoples Slavery Before 1500 The Golden Age of Spain

6 Worlds in Motion 1450-1550 Worlds in Collision
Christopher Columbus Finds a Patron Columbus Finds a New World Tainos and Caribs The Origins of a New World Political Economy The Requerimiento and the Morality of Conquest

7 Worlds in Motion 1450-1550 The Biological Consequences of Conquest
Demographic Decline The Columbian Exchange

8 Worlds in Motion 1450-1550 Onto the Mainland
The First Florida Ventures The Conquest of Mexico The Establishment of a Spanish Empire Gender and Conquest The Return to Florida Coronado and the Pueblo Indians

9 Worlds in Motion Conclusion

10 AMERICAN PORTRAIT Malinche: Cultural Translator
“In the long period of encounter and conquest initiated by the Spanish arrival in the new world, cultural translators…would possess unique power. In translating one world to the other, they helped create a new world, one very different from any that had ever existed before.” What “new world” did Malinche help create? What does this story reveal about the relative powers of the Spanish and the indigenous peoples in this new world? What unique power did cultural translators, such as Malinche, wield in this arrangement?

11 The World of the Indian Peoples
The Archaic Indians What general changes occurred to early Native American societies as they spread across the Western Hemisphere between 10,000 BCE – 3,000 BCE? Population Industry Social Structure What factors led to Native Americans’ cultural diversity? What economic complexes emerged that counteracted this cultural diversity and isolation?

12 The World of the Indian Peoples
Native American Economic Complexes: Four Geographic-Cultural Domains in North America: Eastern Woodlands: horticulture and hunting Mississippian mound builders City center: Cahokia Iroquois Algonquians Plains: maize and buffalo hunting Buffalo hunters Deserts: maize horticulture Anasazi pueblos villages Chaco Canyon Mesa Verde Pacific Coast: fishing and hunting The Great Civilizations of Mesoamerica Mayas and Toltecs

13 The Worlds of Christopher Columbus
“The traders and the warriors set the world in motion…” European Nations in the Age of Discovery How was power distributed within Europe prior to the age of discover? The Political Economy of Europe How did Europe’s role change in the world economy after 1450? What factors drove Spanish and Portuguese exploration? Economic Technological Political The World of the West African Peoples Complex kingdoms Simple villages

14 The Worlds of Christopher Columbus
Slavery Before 1500 Ancient slave institutions Roman Empire Europe Africa Transformation of slavery in Africa Muslim traders Portuguese traders The Golden Age of Spain What was the social and intellectual impact of the Muslim invasion and control of Spain before 1492? What was the meaning and legacy of the reconquista?

15 Worlds in Collision These explorers…were propelled by an expanding Europe’s desire for trade and for spreading the Christian religion.” Christopher Columbus Finds a Patron How was Columbus able to persuade the Spanish monarchy to finance his 1492 voyage? Columbus Finds a New World How did the industries of the Tainos and Caribs compare? Why does it make sense that the Spanish got along with the Tainos as compared to the Caribs?

16 Worlds in Collision The Origins of a New World Political Economy
How did Columbus and his crew compensate for their failure to find the expected gold treasures in the New World? What role did native peoples now play in European quest for wealth? What role did Christian conversion play in the subjugation of native peoples? The Requerimiento The encomienda system

17 The Biological Consequences of Conquest
Demographic Decline What was the scale and scope of the rapid decline of native populations? Why did the introduction of small pox, typhus, and influenza have such a devastating impact? The Columbian Exchange What constituted the so-called Columbian Exchange?

18 Onto the Mainland The First Florida Ventures, 1513, 1521
Juan Ponce de León What did the Calusa take away from their encounter with the Spanish? The Conquest of Mexico, 1519 The Aztec Empire before conquest City capital: Tenochtitlán (pop. 200,000) Ruler: Moctezuma Hernán Cortés’s bloody conquest The Establishment of a Spanish Empire Center The transformation of Tenochtitlán to Mexico City Expansion Takeover of the Incan Empire in Peru Borderlands outposts in present-day New Mexico

19 Onto the Mainland Gender and Conquest The Return to Florida
What role did gender play in organizing Native American, African, and European societies? What role did gender play in conquest? The Return to Florida Lucas Vázquez de Ayllón, 1526 Pánfilo de Narváez, 1528 Hernando de Soto, How did de Soto’s actions reflect that of a classic conquistador? Coronado and the Pueblo Indians, How did Coronado and his men’s expectations of finding gold set the stage for a violent confrontation with Native Americans?

20 Worlds in Motion 1450-1550 Revisiting The Common Threads:
>> What role did the colonies play in imperial conflict? That is, how did they shape that conflict and how were they shaped by it? >> How were Native Americans drawn into imperial conflict? To what extent were they able to shape it for their own purposes? >> What did it mean for the American colonies to be peripheral— literally— to the British Empire? >> How did the colonists adapt the available political theories to their purposes? What in the American experience made those theories attractive to the colonists?


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