Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGwendolyn Hart Modified over 9 years ago
2
A Map of the Known World, pre- 1492 Flat World idea is a myth!
3
Motives for European Exploration 1.Crusades and later Ottoman invasion by-pass intermediaries to get to Asia. 2.Renaissance curiosity about other lands and peoples. 3.Reformation refugees & missionaries. 4.Monarchs seeking new sources of revenue. 5.Technological advances. 6.Fame and fortune.
4
New Maritime Technologies Hartman Astrolabe (1532) Better Maps [Portulan] Sextant Mariner’s Compass
5
New Weapons Technology
6
Prince Henry, the Navigator School for Navigation, 1419
7
Portuguese Maritime Empire 1.Exploring the west coast of Africa. 2.Bartolomeo Dias, 1487. 3.Vasco da Gama, 1498. Calicut.
8
Christopher Columbus [1451-1506]
9
Horrible History: Christopher Columbus http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kmwriy 3a6schttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kmwriy 3a6sc
10
Columbus’ Four Voyages
11
Realization of a “New World” “In passed days I wrote very fully to you of my return from new countries, which have been found and explored with the ships, at the cost and by the command of this Most Serene King of Portugal; and it is lawful to call it a new world, because none of these countries were known to our ancestors and all who hear about them they will be entirely new. For the opinion of the ancients was, that the greater part of the world beyond the equinoctial line to the south was not land, but only sea, which they have called the Atlantic; and even if they have affirmed that any continent is there, they have given many reasons for denying it is inhabited. But this opinion is false, and entirely opposed to the truth. My last voyage has proved it, for I have found a continent in that southern part; full of animals and more populous than our Europe, or Asia, or Africa, and even more temperate and pleasant than any other region known to us.” -Amerigo Vespucci, 1503
12
Other Voyages of Exploration
13
Crash Course, 15 th and 16 th century mariners http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NjEGnc ridoQ
14
Ferdinand Magellan & the First Circumnavigation of the World: Early 16 c
15
Atlantic Explorations Looking for “El Dorado”
16
Maya
17
Aztec
18
Inca
19
Horrible Histories: Incas http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDfO6L 5_OlQhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDfO6L 5_OlQ
20
Hernan Cortez The First Spanish Conquests: The Aztecs Montezuma II vs.vs.
21
How was conquest achieved? Disease Technology/warfare strategies Alliances End of the world predicted and initial friendly welcome. Accidental conqueror theory: Jared Diamond
22
How was conquest achieved? Disease: small pox, 2/3 dead Europeans domesticated and lived among their animals. Chickens: influenza, horses: smallpox
23
Technology
24
Division among the people
25
End of the world predicted
26
Mexico Surrenders to Cortez
27
Francisco Pizarro Other Spanish Conquests: The Incas (1533) Atahualpa vs.
28
Cycle of Conquest & Colonization Explorers Conquistadores Missionaries Permanent Settlers Official European Colony!
29
European Empires in the Americas
30
The Colonial Class System Peninsulares Creoles MestizosMulattos Native Indians Black Slaves
32
Lets play… New World or Old World! Ready?
33
Tomato: New World or Old World? New world! Europeans resisted eating them at first for fear that they were poisonous!
34
Pigs: New World or Old World? Old world! Pigs were first brought to South America in the 16 th century, but Brazil now has the world’s third highest pig population!
35
Potato: New World or Old World? New world! They became one of the most important foods in Europe after their import!
36
Coffee: New World or Old World? Old World! Originally from Africa, Coffee was not brought to the new world since the 17 th century.
37
Sugar Cane: New World or Old World? Old World! Originally from Asia, sugar was brought to the new world in the 18 th century.
38
The “Columbian Exchange” Squash Avocado Peppers Sweet Potatoes Turkey Pumpkin Tobacco Quinine Cocoa Pineapple Cassava POTATO Peanut TOMATO Vanilla MAIZE Syphilis Olive COFFEE BEAN Banana Rice Onion Turnip Honeybee Barley Grape Peach SUGAR CANE Oats Citrus Fruits Pear Wheat Cattle Sheep Pigs Smallpox Flu Typhus Measles Malaria Diptheria Whooping Cough Trinkets Liquor GUNS
39
The Powerful Potato But maybe most important was the potato which fed ½ the people in Europe allowing population to grow and states to stabilize. However when using Chinese slaves to collect guano off of Peru for fertilizer they brought over the potato blight which causes devastation. Example: Still fewer people in Ireland today than before the famine which struck in 1845.
40
Treasures from the Americas!
41
The Slave Trade 1.Existed in Africa before the coming of the Europeans, but was very different. 2.Portuguese replaced European slaves with Africans. Sugar cane & sugar plantations. First boatload of African slaves brought by the Spanish in 1518. 275,000 enslaved Africans exported to other countries in the 16 th century Between 16 c & 19 c, about 10 million Africans shipped to the Americas.
42
How The Slave Trade Differed in Africa and the New World 1.Generally, in Africa, slavery was more like a form of peasantry- slaves paid tribute to the owners in goods and services 2.Children of slaves not considered property of the slave owner 3.In some cases, possibility of social advancement 4.Not race-based
43
Why not use native Americans? Latin Americans had not made good slaves as they were dying from disease and escaping. Also some laws passed from Catholic monarchs that slavery was immoral except in the case of Africans. Africans had immunities to malaria that had built up over the years of exposure.
44
Father Bartolome de Las Casas New Laws 1542, ignored and led to more African slavery
45
Religious Justification for Slavery The introduction of Islam in Africa led to an increase in slavery and the slave trade Muslim belief that prisoners of war could be captured and enslaved Complex Christian views on slavery Written about in the Bible The Catholic Church first allowed slavery of non-Christians, then declared it sinful in the 16 th century.
46
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade
47
Slave Ship “Middle Passage”
48
Slave Ship An average of 15% of captured people died on the voyage, up to 33%
49
“Coffin” Position Below Deck
50
African Captives Thrown Overboard Sharks followed the slave ships!
51
African Captives Thrown Overboard
52
Slaves Working in a Brazilian Sugar Mill
53
The Influence of the Colonial Catholic Church Guadalajara Cathedral Guadalajara Cathedral Our Lady of Guadalupe Our Lady of Guadalupe Spanish Mission Spanish Mission
54
Church was complicit in oppression and conquering lands
55
The Treaty of Tordesillas, 1494 & The Pope’s Line of Demarcation
56
New Colonial Rivals 1.Portugal lacked the numbers and wealth to dominate trade in the Indian Ocean. 2.Spain in Asia consolidated its holdings in the Philippines. 3.First English expedition to the Indies in 1591. Surat in NW India in 1608. (EEIC) 4.Dutch arrive in India in 1595.
57
New Colonial Rivals
58
Impact of European Expansion 1.Native populations ravaged by disease and slavery. 2.Influx of gold, and especially silver, into Europe created an inflationary economic climate. [“Price Revolution”] 3.New products introduced across the continents [“Columbian Exchange”] 4.Deepened colonial rivalries and belief in mercantilism.
59
5. New Patterns of World Trade
60
The Slave Trade from one Black American’s perspective: H.L. Gates http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88a9V5 yTDqshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88a9V5 yTDqs
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.