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Europeans Explore the East. I. Gold, God, & Glory  Before 1400s = Euros. (little outside contact)  Motivating factors of exploration?

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Presentation on theme: "Europeans Explore the East. I. Gold, God, & Glory  Before 1400s = Euros. (little outside contact)  Motivating factors of exploration?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Europeans Explore the East

2 I. Gold, God, & Glory  Before 1400s = Euros. (little outside contact)  Motivating factors of exploration?

3 A. New Trade Routes  New sources of wealth = #1 motivation! Exposed to exotic spices & silks = Crusades High Demand + Low Supply = High Prices  Muslims & Italians controlled trade from East  Euros. grew tired of paying high $$$$$

4 B. The Spread of God  Crusades = hostility betw. Christians/Muslims MUST SPREAD THE WORD OF GOD!!!

5 C. Technological Advances  1. Mapmaking improved (Ren.---Ptolemy) Added info. about Af. & Asia Sea captains were inspired by new maps

6 2. Navigation Instruments  Compass (Chinese invention – 70 CE)  Astrolabe (Muslims – 800 CE)

7 3. Caravel (1400s)  Euro. ships could NOT sail against wind  Caravel = had triangular sails (Arabs)

8 II. Portugal Leads the Way  Port. = first country to est. posts in W. Af.

9 A. Portuguese in Africa  Prince Henry the Navigator (1394-1460) Determined to reach the East Spread God 1419: founded navigation school (Port.)  Canary Islands, Azores, & Madeira

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11 B. Port. Reach Asia  1488: Bartolomeu Diaz—reached southern tip of Af. Explored S.E. Af.  1497: Vasco da Gama—explored E. coast of Af. & reached Calicut (S.W. India) --returned to Port. (1499) w/spices --gave Port. direct sea route to India

12 III. Spanish Claims  1492: Christopher Columbus convinced Spain to finance voyage across Atlantic Oct.—reached Bahamas (East Indies?) Opened up Euro. colonization in Amers.  Tensions betw. Spain & Port.  1493: Pope Alexander VI—Line of Demarcation West of line = Spain East of line = Port. TREATY OF TORDESILLAS

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14 IV. Indian Ocean Trade  Euro. nations competed for territory (S. & S.E. Asia)

15 A. Port’s. Trading Empire  Port. took control of spice trade from Muslims  1514: Port. gained control of Straits of Hormuz  1510: Port. captured Goa (India) (capital)  1511: Port. sailed to East Indies Strait of Malacca (Spice Islands)  Broke Muslim-Italian trade domination  1521: Ferdinand Magellan (Philippines) Spanish claim = 1565

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17 B. Others Challenge Port.  1600: English & Dutch challenged Port. Dutch = largest fleet (20,000)  Formed an East India Company (est. & directed trade) Dutch East India Company = LARGEST/DOMINATED  1619: took Spice Islands from Port. Amsterdam  1700: Dutch controlled much of Asian trade

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19 C. British Traders  1700: British East India Co. = India (cotton)  Euro. impact did not spread beyond ports

20 V. China Limits Euro. Contacts  Euros. sought trade in E. Asia (China & Japan)

21 A. China Under Ming (1368-1644)  China = dominated Asia Vassal states = paid tribute (Euros. too!)  Yonglo (1398): moved capital to Beijing Created the Forbidden City (1406-1420) 1405: funded 7 exploratory voyages  Impress the world & gain more tribute

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23 B. Voyages of Zheng He  Led all 7 voyages  EVERYTHING WAS HUGE (distances & ships)  S.E. Asia to E. Af.  “Floating City” sailing throughout Indian Ocean  16 countries sent tribute to Ming  Too much $$$$$!!!!!  1433: Voyages ended --- ISOLATION

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25 VI. The Qing Dynasty  1600: Ming rule declined  1644: Manchus est. Qing Dynasty

26 A. Manchus Cont. Isolation  Had to obey Chinese rules of trade Select ports, tribute, kowtow Dutch accepted rules  1793: letter from King George III to Qing Emp. Wanted to import Brit. goods into China Qing Emp. declared China to be self-sufficient There is nothing we lack, as your principle envoy and others have themselves observed. We have never set much store on strange or ingenious objects, nor do we need any more of your country’s manufactures.  China remained isolated until mid-1800s

27 VII. Contact Betw. Euro. & Japan  16 th Cent. = Euro. merchants & missionaries

28 A. Port. in Japan  1543: Port. sailors shipwrecked in Japan Merchants followed—brought manufactured items (firearms)  Daimyo? In their hands they carried something two or three feet long, straight on the outside with a passage inside, and made of a heavy substance.... This thing with one blow can smash a mountain of silver and a wall of iron. If one sought to do mischief in another man’s domain and he was touched by it, he would lose his life instantly. Japanese produced these weapons  Eliminated Samurai culture

29  1549: Christian missionaries arrived Were accepted…at first  By 1600: over 300,000 were converted Tokugawa Ieyasu (Shogun)– upset by missionaries  1612: Ieyasu banned Christianity  1637: 30,000 peasant Christians revolted against their daimyo Led by Amakusa Shiro  Christians were ruthlessly persecuted Euro. missionaries = killed or deported Japanese = demonstrate faithfulness to Buddhism

30 B. The Closed Country Policy  Japanese did not like Euro. ideas but valued their trade  By 1639: “closed country policy” Commercial contacts ended Nagasaki—only port open—Dutch & Chinese Japanese forbidden to leave Self-sufficient  1854: Matthew C. Perry & Millard Fillmore Convention of Kanagawa


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