1 / 9

SPAIN IN AMERICA

Jessica Kyriacou, Tyler Henry, Laura Dorfman, Courtney McNamara. SPAIN IN AMERICA. THE SPANISH EXPLORATION. Spanish explorers voyaged to the Americas in search of lands that were rich in natural resources and metals such as gold and silver. CONQUISTADORS.

fisseha
Télécharger la présentation

SPAIN IN AMERICA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Jessica Kyriacou, Tyler Henry, Laura Dorfman, Courtney McNamara SPAIN IN AMERICA

  2. THE SPANISH EXPLORATION Spanish explorers voyaged to the Americas in search of lands that were rich in natural resources and metals such as gold and silver. CONQUISTADORS • Spanish conquerors from the early 1500s • Invaded the Caribbean, took control over the islands and enslaved the natives forcing them to do labour • Brought over European diseases and influenzas that natives weren’t accustomed to and many got sick and died • In the 1520’s they brought over people from Africa as slaves to compensate for the natives who effectively had been wiped out

  3. THE SPANISH EXPLORATION THE TALE OF CORTÉS AND MOCTEZUMA • Hernán Cortés left Cuba in 1519 and travelled to the shores of Mexico with 600 men and quickly overpowered the natives • The Aztec empire, Moctezuma believed Cortés was Quetzalcoatl,a god who promised to return as a fair skinned man • Spaniards gained allies from some of the subjects of Aztec as they went inland towards the capital Tenochtitlan • When they arrived at the capital they captured Moctezuma and raided the city • The Spaniards were driven out of Tenochtitlan eight months later by the Aztecs when the empire was killed by one of his subjects • Later Cortés cut off supplies to the capital and destroyed the city with the help of his allied natives

  4. THE SPANISH EXPLORATION DESTRUCTION OF THE INCAN EMPIRE • Conquest of Mexico encouraged other conquistadors to seek their fortunes in the Americas • Francisco Pizzarowas an illiterate soldier who heard about fabulously rich cities on the Pacific Coast of South America • In 1531 he set sail from Panama with 150 soldiers towards the Incan Empire (present-day Peru) • Pizzaro and the Spaniards greeted the emperor Atahualpa with swords and guns taking him captive • Atahualpa gave the Spanish a room filled with gold objects and other treasures • Later the Spanish executed Atahualpaand settlers immigrated to Peru, where they mined silver and gold

  5. THE SPANISH EXPLORATION JUNÍPERO SERRA • Most Spanish conquests in the New world were marked by a terrible slaughter of the local people • Junípero Serra was born on an island off the Spanish coast and became a Franciscan priest and a professor of philosophy • He established Spanish control in California by setting up missions to care for Native Americans • Serra wished to work as a missionary among the natives and in 1749 he left Spain to travel to Mexico • When he was 55 he had been sent to take control of Upper California • His motto had been “Always go forward and never turn back.”

  6. LIFE IN THE COLONIES ELUSIVE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH • Instead of heading south, some Spanish conquistadors explored areas in the North • One explorer that did so was Juan Ponce de León, the governor of Puerto Rico • In 1513, the Spaniards reached land near what is now the city of St. Augustine, they named the area Florida • After 1542, the Spanish worked to consolidate their empire in the Americas

  7. LIFE IN THE COLONIES COLONIAL LIFE • Spain’s American colonies formed a structured society: • Peninsulares: high government and church officials who were born in Spain • Creoles: born in Spanish colonies of Spanish parents • Mestizos: those born of Native American and Spanish parents • Mulattoes: people of Spanish and African or Native American ancestry • Spaniards were given title to American land and ownership of the villages on that land • In return the Indians would be converted to Christianity

  8. LIFE IN THE COLONIES LAND AND AGRICULTURE • Conquistadors were given land by the Spanish monarchs and earned the ability to demand tax and labour from the Native Americans through the encomienda system • Spanish colonists overworked the natives to gain personal wealth • Spanish became the language of the colonies through the socializing of the natives and the Spanish, however many natives kept on with their language of origin • The two cultures were combined, the Spanish introduced crops such as wheat and oranges along with cattle and horses • Spaniards also affected life in Europe when they returned with items like potatoes tomatoes and corn which they were introduced to by the Native Americans

  9. LIFE IN THE COLONIES COLONIAL ADMINISTRATION AND RELIGIOUS MISSIONS • Viceroys were appointed by the Spanish monarch to look after the crown • Audiencia was a court set up to oversee the viceroys and monitor the behaviors of the conquistadors to allow equity for the natives • Missions were established to persuade Native Americans to become Catholics and many priests like Father Bartolomé de Las Casas tried to protect the natives from the Spaniards • Presidios were built near missions to house native peoples who would be fed, clothed, and taught European methods and traditions and attended religious services

More Related