exploration and expansion sol4. basic geography facts that are important to the age of exploration
TRANSCRIPT
Exploration and Expansion
SOL4
Basic Geography Facts that are important to the Age of
Exploration
ASIAEUROPENORTH AMERICA
SOUTH AMERICA
AFRICA
ANTARCTICA
AUSTRALIA
Atla
ntic O
cean
Pacific Ocean
Indian Ocean
Arctic Ocean
United States
Canada
Mexico
Atlant
ic O
cean
Pacific
Ocean
England
Spain
France
Italy
Spain
France
England
Italy
Portugal
Exploration & Colonization
Economic reasons for European Exploration and Expansion
• Spice – During the crusades, European nations were exposed to
various types of herbs and spices from the East. – Initially the problem was that the Italians held a monopoly on the
trade with the Middle East – In 1453 Constantinople fell to the Islamic Ottoman Empire and
since they were for the most part, not in friendly terms with the Muslims, Europeans sought to find direct trade route with the suppliers of the spice.
– Since Muslim countries controlled the land route, Europeans sought new route via sea routes.
The Silk Road and Spice trade routes were later blocked by the Ottoman Empire in 1453, following the fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans, spurring exploration to find alternative sea routes to asia
Genoese (red) and Venetian (green) maritime trade routes in the Mediterranean and Black Sea provided them a monopoly on trade with the Middle East and Asia
Economic Factors that lead to Exploration and Expansion
• Portugal, a country of one and a half million people, was comparatively poor and had few options open to it but to pursue a policy of overseas expansion.
• The expense of pursuing such a policy meant that the voyages of exploration had to be economically viable. – So exploration was done on a small-scale and
financed by individuals who sought a quick profit from the colonization and exploitation of the Atlantic Islands, and from the opening up of trade with West Africa. (For example Prince Henry the Navigator)
Economic reasons for European Exploration and Expansion
• The fifteenth-century Portuguese navigators continued to explore because they were able to learn that wealth such as gold, ivory and slaves was available along the West Coast of Africa.
• Later in the 15th the goal of finding the source of the spice trade made discovering a sea-route to India the first priority of the Portuguese monarchy
Religious Factors that lead to European Exploration and Expansion
• A critical motivator in the early days of exploration was Christian conversion. – The Portuguese and Spanish had a military
legacy of war against Islam, nurtured by the long Reconquista [re-conquest of the Iberian Peninsula].
– This legacy of the Reconquista motivated the Christian monarchs not only make war against Islam but also to find vast populations to convert to the Christian faith.
Intellectual Reasons for European Exploration and Expansion
• There was also a desire to expand Europe's knowledge about the world. – Columbus for example took the knowledge
gained from practical seamen about the wind patterns of the Atlantic and tested them during his voyages to prove their accuracy.
Factors that lead to Exploration
and Expansion
Demand for Spices and
Asian Goods
Muslim Control of the Land Trade
Routes
Desire to spread
Christianity
(God)
Desire to gain wealth
(Gold)
Desire for Chivalric Honor
(Glory)
Economic
Competition between Countries
How European maps portrayed the world before the Renaissance
The Catholic Church
and the
T-O MAP
Following the fall of the Roman Empire, the quality of maps declined dramatically during the middle ages. Church-sponsored maps devolved into a simplified and stylized map of the world known as a T-O map.
The T-O map derives its name from the map which appears to have the letter "T" contained within an "O" or circle.
The circle represented the known universe and the "T' divided the world into the three known continents: Europe, Asia and Africa. The top of the "map" pointed east (the world "orient" means east and this is where we get the term orientation; now we usually orient maps to the north)The area between the horizontal line in the "T" and the top of the circle represented Asia.
At the intersection of the 'T," on the Asia side, lay Jerusalem which was though, by the church to be the center of the universe.
How the Renaissance Impacted Exploration
New Ideas
and
Advances in Technology
Technology upgrades for Exploration
• Mapmaking– Ptolemy’s influence
• Navigation– New Instruments
• Ship Design– Larger, faster, could sail against the wind
Maps
• In the Renaissance, with the rediscovery of classical works, maps became more like surveys once again, while the discovery of the Americas by Europeans and the subsequent effort to control and divide those lands revived interest in scientific mapping methods.
• European mapmaking was a factor in the global spread of western power: “
Ptolemy and his influence• Claudius Ptolemy (90–168 CE) thought that, with the aid of astronomy and
mathematics, the earth could be mapped very accurately.
– Ptolemy revolutionized the depiction of the spherical earth on a map by using perspective projection, and suggested precise methods for fixing the position of geographic features on its surface using a coordinate system with parallels of latitude and meridians of longitude.[
• Ptolemy was not infallible. His most important error was a miscalculation of the circumference of the earth.
– He believed that Eurasia covered 180° of the globe, which convinced Christopher Columbus to sail across the Atlantic to look for a simpler and faster way to travel to India. Had Columbus known that the true figure was much greater, it is conceivable that he would never have set out on his momentous voyage.
Ptolemy Re-discovered• Ptolemy was the author of a
scientific essay called Geography, which is a thorough discussion of the geographic knowledge of the Greco-Roman world.– he assigned coordinates to
all the places and geographic features he knew, in a grid that spanned the globe.
– Ptolemy also devised and provided instructions on how to create maps both of the whole inhabited world and of the Roman provinces.
– He also provided the necessary topographic lists, and captions for the maps
Magnetic Compass to Determine Direction
The Astrolabe was used to determine Latitude
Determining Speed• Until the mid-19th century vessel speed at sea was measured using a
chip log. This consisted of a wooden panel, weighted on one edge to float upright, and thus present substantial resistance to moving with respect to the water around it, attached by line to a reel. The chip log was "cast" over the stern of the moving vessel and the line allowed to pay out. Knots placed at a distance of 47 feet 3 inches (14.4018 m) passed through a sailor's fingers, while another sailor used a 30 second sand-glass (28 second sand-glass is the current accepted timing) to time the operation.[ The knot count would be reported and used in the sailing master’s dead reckoning and navigation. This method gives a value for the knot of 20.25 in/s, or 1.85166 km/h. The difference from the modern definition is less than 0.02%.
Ships and their Design
The Galley
• A galley is a type of ship propelled by rowers that originated in the Mediterranean region and was used for warfare, trade and piracy.
• Galleys dominated naval warfare in the Mediterranean Sea from the 8th century BC until development of advanced sailing warships in the 16th century.
Exploration and Expansion require changes in Ship
Design
The Lateen Sail:
A triangular sail set on a long yard arm mounted at an angle on the mast, and running in a fore-and-aft direction.
1. One of the great technological developments in shipbuilding, lateen sails made ships more maneuverable.
2. Portuguese and Spanish merchants sailing into the Atlantic, such as Caravels typically used three or more lateen sails.
The Caravel a Revolution in Ship Design
• The picture to the left is a Portuguese caravel.
• This was the standard model of ship used by the Portuguese in their voyages of exploration along the West African coast and into the Atlantic Ocean..– This style of ship was
developed in the 15th century
• It could accommodate about 20 sailors.
Technology Improvements
which aid Exploration
Better Maps
(Ptolemy)
The Astrolabe
The Compass
The Lateen
Sail
The Pit Log
The Caravel
The Age of Exploration 14??
• A time period when Europeans began to explore the rest of the world. – Improvements in mapmaking, shipbuilding,
rigging, and navigation made this possible. • A time period of blue water sailing, not just
coastal boats.• A time period when the economics policy
of mercantilism drives exploration for profit.
An Era of Early Exploration
• In 1001, Viking sailors led by Leif Ericson reached North America. They left no permanent settlement.
Discovered in Norway in 1906, the Oseberg ship, the best preserved Viking ship ever found, reveals its Norse shipbuilders' graceful construction style.
Additional Expansion of European Territorial Claims
SOL 4a Factors contributih
and 4c
Explorer’s of the Age of Discovery:
Portugal
The Portuguese are First (sort of)
Early Explorers
Prince Henry the Navigator
• Henry the Navigator • He was responsible for the
early development of European exploration and maritime trade with other continents.– Under his direction, a new and
much lighter ship was developed, the caravel, which could sail further and faster.
– Henry started to effort to explore the coast of Africa, most of which was unknown to Europeans
Henry the Navigator• Henry encouraged efforts to conquer the city of
Ceuta in 1415. • Capturing Ceuta a Muslim port on the North
African coast across the Straits of Gibraltar from the Iberian peninsula would allow Portugal and Henry to gain control of the trans-Saharan trade routes that terminated there.– Capturing the city exemplified the primary European
motivations for Exploration and Expansion.• Gaining Increased Wealth (Gold)• Gaining Increased Fame (Glory)• Defeating and Pushing back the Muslim Influence
(God)
Western and Northern African Trade Routes
Location of Ceuta, which was the Northern terminal for trade
• Prince Henry sponsored voyages down the coast of Africa
• These voyages were primarily exploration expeditions, but later brought back, numerous African slaves and other trade goods.
• The first contacts with the African slave market were made by expeditions to ransom Portuguese subjects enslaved by pirate attacks on Portuguese ships or villages.
• “ A very strong Christian, Henry saw his efforts almost as a continuation of the crusade against the Muslims.
• His actions against native people who were not Christians were violent, and helped start a violent world trend.
• Henry justified this on the grounds that he was converting these native people to Christianity. For Henry enslavement and Conversion to Christianity were interchangeable terms
Bartolomeu Dias
• Sailed around Cape of Good Hope at southern tip of Africa.
• Found route to Indian Ocean
• Trade can go from Europe to Asia by sea.
Vasco da Gama
• Landed in India in 1498.
• Important trade route from Europe to India and East Indies.
The Explorers: Spain
Christopher Columbus
• 1492 – Made the Atlantic crossing with the Niña, Pinta, and Santa Maria.
• He traveled for Spain, hoping to reach the East Indies by sailing across the Atlantic.
• Instead, he reached the West Indies, islands in the Caribbean.
Christopher Columbus • Believed a shorter
route to Asia could be found by sailing westward instead of around Africa.
• Found the Americas instead. Oops.
Christopher Columbus
The Four Voyages of Columbus
“Discovery consists of seeing what everybody has seen and thinking what
nobody has thought.”
Christopher Columbus, The Admiral who
changed the world
Lasting Impact of Columbus
• His voyages marked the beginning of lasting contact between Europe, Africa, and Americas.
• Devastated the Native American population.
• Columbian Exchange: exchange of goods, ideas, disease, etc. between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres.
What was the Colombian Exchange?
• Massive exchange of plants, animals and diseases.
• These things moved between the New and Old Worlds.
• Started with Columbus. • To the Americas: cows, horses, wheat,
smallpox, plus much more.• To Europe: potatoes, tomatoes, tobacco,
corn, plus much more.
Old World to New World New World to Old World
Diseases
Smallpox, Measles, Chicken PoxMalaria, Yellow Fever, Influenza, The Common Cold
Syphilis
Animals Horses, Cattle, Pigs, SheepGoats, Chickens
Turkeys, Llamas, Alpacas, Guinea Pigs
Plants Rice WheatBarleyOatsCoffeeSugarcaneBananasMelonsOlivesDandelionsDaisiesCloverRagweedKentucky Bluegrass
Corn (Maize)Potatoes (White & Sweet Varieties)Beans (Snap, Kidney, & Lima Varieties)TobaccoPeanutsSquashPeppersTomatoesPumpkinsPineapplesCacao (Source of Chocolate)Chicle (Source of Chewing Gum)PapayasGuavasAvocados
Spain Builds an Empire
• Balboa – crossed the isthmus of Panama and claimed the Pacific for Spain
• Magellan – circumnavigated the globe.• Cortez - Conquers the Aztecs• Pissarro - Conquers the Inca• Ponce de Leone - discovers Florida• Desoto and Coronado - explore the
North American South East and South West
Ferdinand Magellan • His crew made first
round-the-world voyage.
• Proved for certain that the world was round.
• Magellan was killed in the Philippines, did not make it home.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pM-igYjn6E4
The Demise of the Aztecs and the Inca
SOL4c
• Primogeniture—first born son inherits everything• Encomienda system—fort/mission/school/slave factory—
converted enslaved natives to work on ranches/haciendas• Conquistador—Spanish soldier/adventurer/knight, but
usually the younger sons• Hildago—young Spanish nobleman• Black robes—Jesuit priests who accompanied the
conquistadors, set up missions, converted the natives• Peninsulare—Spanish born in Spain (Iberia)• Mestizo—mixed parents—Sp. and Native or African• Creole—pure Spanish parents, but born in the Americas
Spanish Terms
Spanish conquistadors
• Cortés – Conquered the Aztecs, killed their emperor Montezuma.
• Pizarro – Conquered the Incas• De Soto – explored Florida and died
looking for gold he never found• Coronado – claimed present day New
Mexico and Arizona for Spain
Cortez and Aztecs• a Spanish conquistador who led an
expedition that caused the fall of the Aztec Empire and brought large portions of mainland Mexico under the rule of the King of Castile in the early 16th century
• In 1518 Cortez was put in command of an expedition to explore and secure the interior of Mexico for colonization
• On November 8, 1519, Cortez was peacefully received by the Aztec Emperor Moctezuma II,– Moctezuma deliberately let Cortés
enter the heart of the Aztec Empire, hoping to get to know the Spanish weaknesses better and to crush them later.
– Montezuma gave lavish gifts in gold to the Spaniards which enticed them to plunder the Aztec Empire
Montezuma
• Montezuma or Moctezuma [mok–] , 1480?–1520, Aztec emperor (c.1502–1520). He is sometimes called Montezuma II to distinguish him from Montezuma I (ruled 1440–69), who carried on conquests around Tenochtitlan.
• When Hernán Cortés arrived in Mexico, Montezuma, believing the Spanish to be descendants of the god Quetzalcoatl, tried to persuade them to leave by offering rich gifts.
• In 1519. Cortés later seized Montezuma as a hostage and attempted to govern through him. I
• In June, 1520, the Aztec’s rose against the Spanish and Montezuma was killed
Pizarro• a Spanish conquistador,
conqueror of the Incan Empire, and founder of Lima, the modern-day capital of the Republic of Peru.
• In 1513, Pizarro accompanied Vasco Núñez de Balboa in his crossing of the Isthmus of Panama and they became the first Europeans to view the Pacific coast of the New World
• Beginning in 1522 Pizarro lead several expeditions into South America seeking gold and precious gems– These expeditions ended in 1533
with the defeat of the Incan King
Pizarro conquers the Incas
• Atahualpa, ruler of the Inca, sensed that his Spanish captors were greedy and offered a room full of gold as ransom, or payment for his release.
• Pizarro agreed, and the Incas brought gold and silver statues, jewelry, and artwork from all over the empire.
• The Spanish ordered the Incas to melt everything down into gold bars.
• Pizarro then put Atahualpa on trial for treason for plotting against the Spanish.
• Atahualpa was found guilty and was executed on August 29, 1533. With the death of its leader, the Inca Empire soon fell.
Ponce da Leone
first Governor of Puerto Rico by appointment of the Spanish crown. He led the first European expedition to Florida, which he named. He is associated with the legend of the Fountain of Youth, reputed to be in Florida.
Ponce de Leone
• When the war against the Emirate of Granada ended, there was no apparent need for his military services at home and like many of his contemporaries, Ponce de León looked abroad for his next opportunity
St. Augustine, Europe’s oldest permanent
settlement in North America • On August 28, the Feast Day of Saint Augustine, Don Pedro
Menendez de Aviles first sighted the coast of Florida. Twelve days later, on September 8, he stepped ashore, planted the Spanish flag into the sandy soil and, with soldiers and settlers who had traveled with him and Timicuans who greeted his arrival watching, Menendez founded a new city and named it St. Augustine. The year was 1565.From that day until today, the City of St. Augustine has continued to survive and thrive, making it the longest continually inhabited European founded city in the United States, or more commonly called the "Nation’s Oldest City."
The Castillo de San Marcos, built 1672-1695, served primarily as an outpost of the Spanish Empire, guarding St. Augustine, the first permanent European settlement in the continental United States, and also protecting the sea route for treasure ships returning to Spain.
Coronado
• a Spanish conquistador, who visited New Mexico and other parts of what are now the southwestern United States between 1540 and 1542.
Coronado’s March
The Explorers: England
John Cabot
John Cabot (1450-1499) was an Italian-born English explorer and navigator.
Christopher NewportChristopher Newport sailed for England. He was sent by the Virginia Company to establish a colony in the New World. Newport sailed with colonists and supplies on three ships: the Susan Constant, the Godspeed, and the Discovery.
They landed in the New World in 1607 and named the new settlement Jamestown, after King James of England. Jamestown was the first successful English settlement. It is located on the James River in what is now Virginia.
Jamestown
• The 1st permanent English settlement• Had a disastrous start• Thanks to the Indians, they survived• When colonists started growing tobacco,
the colony got better. By 1620, England was importing more than 30,000 lbs of tobacco a year.
England
Jamestown
Francis Drake made a habit out of raiding the
Spanish treasure fleets. He brought gold and jewels home to England. When
the Spanish complained to Queen Elizabeth, she
knighted him “Sir Francis Drake”!
Sir Francis Drake
Why do you think he wanted to be painted with his hand on a
globe?
• DRAKE, FRANCIS Sir Francis Drake (1545-1596) was a British explorer, slave-trader, privateer (a pirate working for a government) in the service of England, mayor of Plymouth, England, and naval officer (he was an Admiral).
• Drake led the second expedition to sail around the world in a voyage lasting from 1577 to 1580
The Explorers: France
French Explorers
Jacques CartierIn 1534 Cartier tried to find a sea passage to the East Indies through North America. He could not find a river that would take ships west from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. Instead he discovered the St. Lawrence River. The St. Lawrence River ended much sooner than Cartier expected. It ended on a high hill which Cartier named Mont Real or King's Mountain in honor of the King of France. Mont Real later became Montreal. Cartier named the area New France and claimed it in the name of the King of France. This discovery opened Canada for Europeans wanting to settle in North America. Cartier took colonists to Cape Rouge near Quebec. The colony was a failure. After this France lost interest in Canada. It would be more than 70 years before another Frenchman came to the mouth of the St. Lawrence River
Jacques Cartier
• Cartier sailed for France.
• He was looking for the Northwest passage to the Indies.
• He explored the St. Lawrence River in Canada, near what later became Quebec.
Samuel de Champlain• Samuel de Champlain
In 1608 Champlain brought a group of settlers to the area around Montreal. They built a fort and a settlement. Champlain sent out traders to buy furs from the Indians. Champlain made friends with the Hurons. He brought missionaries to live with the Indians. These missionaries built churches. Champlain explored the Great Lakes and discovered Lake Champlain. Champlain was the first to systematically investigate the eastern shores of Canada and the New England coast.
Marquette and Joliet
• Father Marquette and Louis JolietIn 1672 Father Marquette, a missionary living with the Huron Indians, contacted Louis Joliet. He wanted them to find a river to the Pacific Ocean. They discovered the Mississippi River. The two traveled as far as the Arkansas River then returned north.
Robert LaSalle• Robert LaSalle
Robert LaSalle finished the trip that Father Marquette and Louis Joliet had started earlier. LaSalle sailed all the way to the mouth of the Mississippi River. Along the way he built a chain of trading posts. LaSalle claimed the entire Mississippi River in the name of France. LaSalle received money from the King of France. His plan was to build a trading post at the mouth of the Mississippi River at the location which is now New Orleans. He got lost and build the post on a small branch of the Mississippi River farther west. Through this the French had a valuable hold on the New World. They made money from the fur trade.The French did little to settle in the New World however. They were more interested in building an empire in Europe. One reason the French were not interested in settling in the New World was because most of the French outposts were in the cold north woods. Many colonists did not want to live under these cold conditions.
New France
• Settled along the St. Lawrence River• Hunters and trappers (coureurs de bois –
“runners of the woods”)• Established friendly relations with the
Indians• Expanded down the Mississippi River• Most largely free of government control
The Spanish Legacy of Rigid Class Systems and One man
Rule in Latin AmericaSOL 4c
Settling New Spain
• 3 kinds of settlements: pueblos, presidios, and missions
• 4 social classes: Peninsulares, creoles, mestizos, Indians
• The Economic system: Encomienda’s or land grants to Spanish colonists which included the right to demand labor or taxes from the Indians
Spanish Colonial Government
• Two men called Viceroys ruled the Spanish empire in the New World for the king of Spain.
• One Viceroy controlled for the Kingdom of New Spain. This included Mexico, the islands of the West Indies, and North America.
• The other Viceroy controlled the Kingdom of Peru. This also included Panama and the Spanish land in South America. – The Viceroys made sure the king's laws were followed and taxes
were collected. They had little authority on their own; all important matters had to be referred to the King/Queen. The concept of local government did not exist.
Spanish Place Names Hispanic Heritage from Coast to Coast
• The Spanish were among the first Europeans to explore what is now the United States, and the first to found a permanent settlement here (St. Augustine, Florida, in 1565). From Alaska's Madre de Dios Island to Mexico, Maine, the United States is dotted with Spanish place names. Here are a few.
• Alamo: "poplar." This tall softwood tree gave its name to a number of U.S. places, including the memorable chapel-fort in Texas and the town of Los Alamos in New Mexico, where atomic bombs were produced.
• Alcatraz Island (California): from álcatraces, pelican. A sizable pelican population once lived on this rocky island in the San Francisco Bay.
• Boca Raton (Florida): from boca de ratónes, a Spanish term applied to nearby inlets. It translates as "mouth of the mouse" (not "rat," which is rata) and may refer to the jagged rocks at these inlets. It has also been suggested that ratónes was a term used for the pirates who might hide in such a place.
• California: The state was named for a mythical land described in a popular Spanish novel from around 1500, Las sergas de Esplandián (The exploits of Esplandián) by Garcia Ordóñez de Montalvo.
• Cape Canaveral (Florida): from cañaveral, canebrake. The promontory NASA made famous takes its name from the thickets of cane that grow in sandy areas.
• Colorado: "reddish." The state is named for the reddish color of mud found in the Colorado River.• El Paso (Texas): "passage." The border city of El Paso lies at a small gap between the Rockies and the
Juarez Mountains of Mexico. This narrow passage has made the city a hub for both north-south and east-west travel.
• Florida: "flowery." Some say that Spanish explorer Ponce de Leon named the land for the Spanish term for Easter, Pascua de Florida (Flowery Feast), because he first saw the land during the Easter season. Others believe he named it for the area's lush flowers.
• Fresno (California): "ash tree." The central Californian city and county are named for their abundant ash trees.
Spanish Conquest of the New World
• The Spanish brought the new crops of sugar cane, coffee, and cereal grains to the New World. The Indians introduced the Spanish to tobacco, potatoes, corn, chocolate from cacao beans, and squash.
Spanish Economic SystemsThe encomienda (Spanish pronunciation: [eŋkoˈmjenda]) is a labor system that was employed mainly by the Spanish crown during the colonization of the Americas and the Philippines. the crown granted a person a specified number of natives for whom they were to take responsibility. The receiver of the grant was to protect the natives from warring tribes and to instruct them in the Spanish language and in the Catholic faith.[1] In return, they could exact tribute from the natives in the form of labor, gold or other products, such as in corn, wheat or chickens. The encomienda was based on the familiar Reconquista institution in which adelantados were given the right to extract tribute from Muslims or other peasants in areas that they had conquered and resettled.
In 1503 the crown began to legally grant encomiendas to soldiers, conquistadors and officials. The encomiendas became very corrupt and harsh. The downfall of the encomienda system began as early as 1510, when Dominican missionaries began protesting the abuse of the native people by Spanish colonists. The encomienda system was succeeded by the crown-managed repartimiento and the hacienda, or large landed estates, in which laborers were directly employed by the hacienda owners. Like the encomienda, the new repartimento did not include the attribution of land to anyone, only the allotment of native workers.
Harsh Life for Native Americans
Indians forced to work in Spanish mines
Most die so Spanish seek other labor sources
Atlantic slave trade begins
Bartholomeo de las Casas• Bartholomew de Las Casas was born in Seville, Spain in 1474. He was a young man of wealth
and social position when Columbus returned in 1492 from the New World, bringing a captive Indian as a trophy.
• A typical young Spanish grandee, with a large amount of property on the island of Hispaniola, Bartolomew was atypically kind to the Native People who were slaves on his plantation. However the thought of slavery never really bothered him. It seemed at the time an eminently sensible method of colonizing a new land, and for many years while injustice flared on all sides, he paid little attention to the social injustice of the colonial system.
• In 1510, the Order of Preachers arrived in Hispaniola from Spain. From almost the beginning they began to preach against the entire system of slavery.
• Bartholomew de Las Casas was one of the colonists who heard Father Anthony Montesinos preach against slavery. While at that time he was not prepared to give up his slaves, he did realize with greater clarity the injustices he and the other Spaniards were committing against the Native People..
• Las Casas soon after became a priest and he was assigned as chaplain to the army invading Cuba.
• Despite the promises made to him assuring a fair use of force; he witnessed a horrible massacre of the Native People. Totally disillusioned, he sailed for Spain the next year, and in 1515 he presented the case of the Native People to the Council of the Indies. For two years de Las Casas pleaded the cause of the conquered people and asked that the king stop the senseless violence.
• King Ferdinand, wishing to avoid the entire situation, sent de Las Casas back to Hispaniola with the title "Protector of the Indians" and with a great many laws to rectify the matter.
• It soon became clear to Bartholomew that laws without backing were futile words. So in less than a year, de Las Casas was sailing back to Spain to ask for support for the laws he had been given.
• More disheartened, Bartholomew returned to Hispaniola and in 1522, freed his own slaves..
• Since traffic in slavery was then a common practice through out the world, de Las Casas at first endorsed the importing of Africans slaves to the colonies, but quickly repented of his decision.
Prayer to Bartholomew de Las Casas
Righteous God, You filled Bartholomew with a zeal for justice for the Native People of the New World. Help us to be people of justice,
ready to defend the rights of the poor, neglected and displaced peoples of our world.
Give us Your grace so that we may create a New World Order of peace and justice for all.
We ask this prayer through our Lord Jesus Christ Your Son, our Lord,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God forever and ever.
Amen
Father Junipero Serra
(1713-1784)
• Father Junipero Serra (Miguel Jose Serra) was one of the most important Spanish missionaries in the New World.
• In 1769 he established a mission at the present site of San Diego, California, the first of a number that would include San Antonio, San Buenaventura, San Carlos, San Francisco de Assisi, San Gabriel, San Juan Capistrano, San Luis Obispo, and Santa Clara.
• Serra was uncompromising in his zeal to convert the Indians to Christianity and to make his missions self sufficient.• Inhabitants built their own homes, spun wool for garments, and pursued
careers as masons, carpenters, blacksmiths, and millers; thousands of barrels of grain were kept in reserve supply, and herds of cattle, sheep, horses, and swine were maintained.
Serra founded the following missions:
• LOWER CALIFORNIASerra was president of the following missions.(all founded by the Jesuits)1. 1697 - Nuestra Señora de Loreto2. 1699 - San Francisco Xavier3. 1705 - Santa Rosalía de Mulegé4. 1708 - San José de Comondú5. 1720 - La Purísima Concepción de . . . . . . . .María Cadegomó6. 1720 - Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe7. 1721 - Santiago de las Coras8. 1721 - Nuestra Señora de los Dolores9. 1728 - San Ignacio10. 1730 - San José del Cabo11. 1733 - Todos Santos12. 1737 - San Luís Gonzaga13. 1752 - Santa Gertrudis14. 1762 - San Francisco de Borja15. 1767 - Santa María de Los Angeles
• UPPER CALIFORNIASerra was responsible for the founding of the first nine missions.1) 1769 - San Diego de Alcalá2) 1770 - San Carlos Borromeo3) 1771 - San Antonio de Padua4) 1771 - San Gabriel Arcángel5) 1772 - San Luís Obispo de Tolosa6) 1776 - San Francisco de Asís7) 1776 - San Juan Capistrano8) 1777 - Santa Clara de Asís9) 1782 - San Buenaventura
[June 7, 1494]
THE TREATY OF TORDESILLAS
Treaty of TordesillasPapal Line
of Demarcation 1494
• Upon returning to Spain in 1493 after his first voyage, Christopher Columbus contacted Pope Alexander VI (a Spaniard by birth) to report his discoveries. Acting as the great European arbiter of the day, the pope then issued a bull (decree) that divided the New World lands between Spain and Portugal by establishing a north-south line of demarcation 100 leagues* west of the Cape Verde Islands. Undiscovered non-Christian lands to the west of the line were to be Spanish possessions and those to the east belonged to Portugal.
• News of this decision was not warmly greeted by the Portuguese, who argued that previous agreements conflicted with the pope's decision.
• In the spring of 1494, representatives of Spain and Portugal met in the Spanish town of Tordesillas and negotiated a mutually satisfactory solution to their dispute. The line of demarcation was relocated to a position 370 leagues west of the Cape Verde Islands. (It was impossible during this age to determine precisely the impact of this agreement on account of the nagging difficulty of establishing longitude accurately.) However, Portugal emerged with an enhanced position by gaining a larger portion of South America (Brazil). Even with this modification, Spain had gained control (on paper) of most of the New World.
• The pope granted his official recognition of this agreement in 1506. Spain and Portugal, with a few exceptions, remained loyal to the terms of the treaty; the Portuguese would expand deep into Brazil beyond the demarcation line, but Spain did not object. The natives of these regions, needless to say, were not consulted about the assignment of their homelands to others and competing powers in Europe totally ignored the line.
• For years following 1494, the Spanish lamented their consent to the treaty, convinced that they had received the short end of the stick. Their initial discoveries in the New World yielded little mineral wealth, but much disease and discomfort. Their evaluation of this bargain with Portugal changed dramatically in the 1520s as the riches from Aztec Mexico began to be exploited.
What?
Treaty between Spain and Portugal
Divided New lands
Native people had no say
Why? intended to resolve the dispute: Christopher Columbus &
New lands 1481 : land south of the Canary Islands to Portugal. 1493 : Pope Alexander VI west of the Cape Verde
Islands should belong to Spain, Portugal unmentioned territory under Christian rule remain Another in 1493 gave all mainland's and islands then
belonging to India to Spain The Portuguese King John II :prevented him from
possessing India, Negotiate with King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of
Spain to move the line to the west Treaty established
Anti-Meridian “line of demarcation” did not encircle Earth=first come first
serve Portugal-- Moluccas in 1512 Spain 1518 argue: Treaty of Tordesillas divided the Earth
into two equal hemispheres 1529 Treaty of Saragossa (or Zaragoza) Spain relinquish
claims of Moluccas by payment of 350,000 gold coins
…Where?
46°W 142°E Sign Treaty
Put the line of demarcation on the map
The Other European Explorers: Holland
“Netherlands”
HUDSON, HENRY
Henry Hudson (1565-1611) was an English explorer and navigator who explored parts of the Arctic Ocean and northeastern North America. The Hudson River, Hudson Strait, and Hudson Bay are named for Hudson
New Netherland
• Settled along the Hudson River around what is now New York
• Established a busy port.• The Dutch and French became rivals in
the fur trade.• The Rivals established alliances with
Native tribes, thus increasing warfare among the Indians, French, Dutch, and English.
1st century AD Chinese invent the first compass.
120 AD Ptolemy creates the first flat map of the world
982 Eric the Red discovers Greenland
1002 Leif Erickson discovers North America.
1271- 1295 Marco Polo goes to China.
1450 Prince Henry the Navigator builds school for sailors.
1487 Bartholomeu Dias discovers the southern tip of Africa.
1492 Columbus sails to the New World.
1497 John Cabot discovers Newfoundland while he searches for the Northwest Passage
1502 Amerigo Vespucci returns from his explorations of the New World. American continents named after him by German mapmaker.
1513 .Vasco Nunez de Balboa discovers the eastern shore of the Pacific Ocean. Juan Ponce de Leon searches for the Fountain of Youth in Florida.
1519 – 1522 Ferdinand Magellan and his crew sail around the world.
1521 Hernando Cortez defeats the Aztec Empire.
1533 Francisco Pizarro defeats the Inca Empire
1534 Jacques Cartier discovers the St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes
1539 – 1542 Hernando De Soto explores the southeastern United States
1540 Francisco Vasquez de Coronado explores the southwestern United States and discovers the Grand Canyon.
1577 Sir Francis Drake becomes the first Englishman to sail around the world.
Explorers to the New World1539 – 1542 Hernando De Soto explores the southeastern United States.
1540 Francisco Vasquez de Coronado explores the southwestern United States and discovers the Grand Canyon.
1577 Sir Francis Drake becomes the first Englishman to sail around the world.
1673 Father Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet explore the Mississippi River.
1682 Rene-Robert de La Salle explores the Mississippi River from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico.
Explorers
Date Explorer Nationality Achievement
Around 1000
Leif Ericson Norse First European to reach North American Mainland
1271-1295
Marco Polo Italian
Traveled to the Far East, to what was known then as Cathay or China-Made men want to travel there through his book
1394-1460
Prince Henry Portuguese Created navigation school in Sagres, Portugal Explored the western African coastline
1487-1488
Bartholomeu Dias
Portuguese First European to round the Cape of Good Hope
1492-1504
Christopher Columbus
Italian Made 4 voyages to West Indies and Caribbean Islands
1497-1503
Amerigo Vespucci
Italian Sailed to West Indies and South America
1497-1498
John Cabot Italian Explored the shores of Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and Labrador
1498 Vasco Da Gama
Portuguese First to travel to West Indies around Africa
1513 Vasco de Balboa
Spanish Led expedition across Panama and found the Pacific Ocean
1513 Juan Ponce de Leon
Spanish Explored Florida looking for the Fountain of Youth
1520-1521 Ferdinand Magellan
Portuguese Commanded first globe circling voyage
1519-1521 Hernando Cortez Spanish Conquered Aztecs in Mexico
1523 Giovanni da Verranzano
Italian Searched for a Northwest Passage
1523-1535 Francisco Pizarro Spanish Conquered Peru
1534-1542 Jacques Cartier French Traveled St. Lawrence River
1539-1541 Hernando De Soto Spanish Explored American Southeast-Discovered the Mississippi River
1540-1542 Francisco Vazquez de Coronado
Spanish Explored American Southwest
1577-1580 Sir Frances Drake English First English to sail around the world-Defeated the Spanish Armada- Claimed California for England
1603-1616 Samuel de Champlain
French Explored eastern coast of North America and the coast of the St. Lawrence River to Lake Huron-Reached Lake Champlain
1609-1611 Henry Hudson English Explored Hudson Bay, Hudson River, and Hudson Strait
1672 Marquette and Louis Joliet
French Explored Northern Mississippi River
1682 Robert LaSalle French Traveled to the mouth of the Mississippi River and claimed it for France
Colonizing North America
Search for the Northwest Passage
Rivalries Among European Nations
• The Protestant Reformation in 1500s divided Europe
• Europeans settling in the Americas brought their rivalries with them (Example: Sir Francis Drake)
Migration to the New World
• Pull effects– Economic Opportunity– Religious Freedom
• Push effects– Wars of Religion – Religious Persecution
The Slave Migration
• Africans who were brought to the new world paraticpated in an involuntary migration– About 10,000,000 Africans were removed
from Africa and sent to the new world • About 4,000,000 survived the crossing and were
established in the new world settlements
The Slave Trade
• Europeans began to use slave labor in their colonies to grow crops, mine, etc.
• Native Americans used for a while, but Africans began to be brought to the Americas.
• The slave trade then became the main focus of Europe’s relations with Africa.
Role of Calvinism in Migration
• The reasons– Religious persecutions– 30 years war– Expulsion of Huguenots from France
• The Colonies– Plymouth (Pilgrims)– Mass Bay (Puritans)– New Amsterdam (Dutch and German
Calvinist plus French Huguenots
Signing the Mayflower Compact
The impact of trade on Colonization
• The Triangle Trade– English and French Mercantilism– Established pattern of trade which included
the importation of slaves to the new world.– Lead to the idea that economic opportunity
could be found in the new world• Increased the number of people migrating to the
new world for work as indentured servants
What was the Triangular Trade?
• System of trade between Europe, Africa, and the Americas.
• Stage 1: Raw materials to Europe (tobacco, rum, sugar)
• Stage 2: Manufactured goods to Africa (guns, cloth, rum)
• Stage 3: Slaves to the Americas to make raw materials.
The Triangular Trade