objective 20: the columbian exchange. should columbus day be celebrated as a national holiday?

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Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange

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Page 1: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange

Page 2: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Page 3: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Voyages of Christopher Columbus

• Under the sponsorship of the Spanish crown, headed for Asia by sailing west

• Landed in the Bahamas

• Made four voyages altogether

• Didn’t find gold or spices

• Did find a “new world”

Page 4: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Columbus Landing at Guanahani, 14921837-47 Rotunda, US Capitol, Washington

John Vanderlyn, an American whose revolutionary sympathies had led him to study and work in Paris in the early days of the empire, executed this painting in the American Capitol in Washington. His theme was Columbus Landing at Guanahani, 1492, glorifying the arrival on this West Indian island of the historical figure who was regarded as the founder of the white and Christian Americas. His Indians crouch like wild animals, frightened and puzzled, and some of the explorer's Spanish sailors crawl on the ground, already hunting for gold.

Page 5: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

The four voyages of Christopher Columbus.

He “discovered” “Hispaniola” [Haiti/DR] and the “Indians.”

Page 6: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Seven Myths of Spanish Conquest

• “Exceptional Men”

• “The King’s Army”—Neither paid nor forced.

• “White Conquistadors” – Invisible Allies

• “Spanish Conquest” – Myth of Completion

• “The Myth of (Mis) Communication”

• The Myth of Indian Desolation

• The Myth of Superiority

Page 7: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

What Really Happened?

• Disease

• Native disunity

• Weapons – guns, steel, horses, war dogs, tactical skills, especially the steel sword

• Culture of War

• Global context of an age of expansion

Page 8: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Pre-Columbian America. Pre-Columbian America had two great regions of trade and political power. In the north, the Aztec kingdom, centered on Tenochtitlán, dominated. The adjacent Maya of Central America were in decline. In South America, about 1500, the Inca dominated the Andes mountain regions, linking them together through an extensive system of roads.

Page 9: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Conquest of Mexico • 1519-1521 conquered

the Aztec empire with only 450 men

• How?– Superior weapons– “Divide and conquer”– Disease

Hernán Cortés

Page 10: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Cortes with Doňa Marina a.k.a. “Malinche”

Broken spears lie in the roads;We have torn our hair in our grief.The houses are roofless now, and their wallsAre red with blood…

Elegy for Tenochtitlan

Page 11: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Conquest of the Incan Empire

• 1530-40 conquered the Incan empire with only 600 men

Page 12: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

The “Columbian Exchange”

TE: “…the global diffusion of plants, food crops, animals, human populations, and disease pathogens that took place after voyages of exploration by Christopher Columbus and other European mariners...”

Page 13: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Three main aspects of the Columbian Exchange

• Biological exchanges

• Dietary exchanges

• Human migration

Page 14: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Biological exchanges

• Prior to Columbus’s voyages, Eurasia was “thoroughly diseased” and the Americas had been in relative “biological isolation.” Why?

• Contact among cultures of Eurasia had been much more intense over the centuries.

• Eurasians had a long history of domesticating animals—a source of disease.

Page 15: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Diseases exchanged:

• Eurasia Americas:– Smallpox, measles, diphtheria, whooping

cough, influenza

• Americas Eurasia:– Syphilis?

Page 16: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Consequences of biological exchanges:

• Devastation of native populations of the Americas and Oceania.

• Within one century, some native populations declined 95%!!!!

Images of Aztec smallpox victims.

Page 17: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Between 1500 and 1800 approximately one hundred million people* in the Americas and

Oceania likely died of imported diseases.

*The current population of the U.S. is 300 million so this was equivalent to 1 in 3

Americans living today.

Page 18: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Dietary exchanges• Americas Eurasia

– “New World Crops-– Maize, potatoes,

beans, tomatoes, peppers, peanuts, manioc, papayas, guavas, avocados, pineapples, cacao, tobacco

Eurasia Americas – “Old World”– Wheat, horses, cattle,

pigs, sheep, goats, chickens The incredible potato!!!

Page 19: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Export of Tobacco from Virginia

0

50000

100000

150000

200000

250000

300000

1616 1624 1638

Pounds

“Drug and Taste Revolution”

Page 20: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?
Page 21: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Consequences of dietary exchanges:

• More balanced diets globally

• Increased calories in Eurasian diets the amazing potato and also maize

• Basis of “national” foods and customs tomatoes to Italy, spices to China, horses and cattle to the Americas

• A surge in global population!

Page 22: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Population increases:

World population:

• 1500: 425 million• 1600: 545 million• 1750: 720 million• 1800: 900 million

World population more than doubled in three hundred years!!

This more than offset population losses due to disease.

Page 23: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

World Population Growth, 1500-1800 CE

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

1500 1600 1700 1800

Millions

Page 24: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Human migration

The massive de-population of the Americas due to conquest and disease:

• Enabled European migration and colonization

• Compelled forced migration of slaves from Africa

Page 25: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?
Page 26: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?
Page 27: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Sugar and Slavery

“Every ton of sugar represented a life; every teaspoonful represented 6 days of a slave’s life.”

Page 28: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

0

10000

20000

30000

40000

50000

60000

16th c. 17th c. 18th c.

African Slave Exports per Century

Page 29: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

50%

33%

12%

5%

Caribbean

Brazil

Central, South America

North America

Destination of Africans in the

Atlantic Slave Trade

Page 30: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?
Page 31: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

The “Atlantic System”

Page 32: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Slave trade• Transfers African culture to the Americas• Between 1450 – 1850 it is estimated 12

million Africans were shipped across the Atlantic Ocean

• Portuguese and then Dutch, English, and French

• European agents made agreements with local leaders to traffic slaves

• Enormous profits – up to 300 % on a voyage

• Sugar plantation labor

Page 33: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Manila galleon route and the lands of Oceania, 1500-1800

Page 34: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

European exporation in the Pacific Ocean, 1519-1780.

Page 35: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

European trading posts in Africa and Asia, about 1700

Page 36: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

European empiresand colonies in theAmericas

c. 1700

Page 37: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Economic Impact

• Gold and silver from America to Europe – who uses it to buy Asian goods

• Rise of the European commercial class and decline of the aristocracy

• Europe becomes the center of the world market

Page 38: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?
Page 39: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?
Page 40: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

Some long-term effects of the Columbian Exchange:• Creation of a global economy for the first time in human

history

• European colonization of the Americas

• European Empires-beginning of “westernization”

• Cultural changes – Latin America, Atlantic Civilization

• Global population growth

• Permanent depletion or loss of many native American and Oceanic cultures

• Uneven consequences around the globe

Page 41: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

European exploration, 1450–1600. Spanish and Portuguese explorers and traders had established settlements in South America and the Caribbean by 1600, and commercial depots on the coasts of Africa, India, the Pacific islands, China, and Japan—at a time when English, Dutch, and French explorations of North America had just begun.

Page 42: Objective 20: The Columbian Exchange. Should Columbus Day be celebrated as a national holiday?

World exploration. The limitations on sea routes through the Middle East drove the trading nations of western Europe to seek alternate maritime passages to Asia. European navigators and cartographers rapidly built a map of the globe which included, by sailing west, the “New World” of the Americas and, by sailing south, a passage around Africa, linking with the Arab trading routes of the Indian Ocean. The voyages of the Ming Chinese admiral Zheng He were undertaken to demonstrate China’s strength even more than for trade.