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Exploration 1450-1700 Is contact with other cultures beneficial or harmful to a civilization?

Exploration 1450-1700 Is contact with other cultures beneficial or harmful to a civilization?. Exploration-In a Nutshell. When: 1450-1700 What: Exploration, Conquest, Colonization Who: Portugal, Spain, France, the Dutch, England and other European countries

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Exploration 1450-1700 Is contact with other cultures beneficial or harmful to a civilization?

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  1. Exploration1450-1700 Is contact with other cultures beneficial or harmful to a civilization?

  2. Exploration-In a Nutshell • When: 1450-1700 • What: Exploration, Conquest, Colonization • Who: Portugal, Spain, France, the Dutch, England and other European countries • Where: Africa, the Americas, Asia • Result: Diffusion of ideas and cultural forces that reshaped the global environment

  3. Order of Exploration by Country • Portugal • Spain • France • The Dutch • England

  4. The Order That Conquest and Colonization Happened • Explorers • Conquistadors • Missionaries • Permanent Settlers • Official European Colony

  5. Major Explorers and Their Voyages • Bartholomeu Dias’ voyage (1487) • Christopher Columbus’ first voyage (1492-1493) • Christopher Columbus’ second voyage (1493-1496) • Vasco da Gama’s voyage to India (1497-1499) • John Cabot’s first voyage (1497) • John Cabot’s second voyage (1498) • Christopher Columbus’ third voyage (1498) • Amerigo Vespucci's first voyage (1499-1500) • Christopher Columbus’ fourth voyage (1502-1503) • Magellan’s voyage around the world (1519-1522)

  6. A Map of the Known World Before 1492

  7. What Encouraged Exploration? • Marco Polo took the Silk Road, returned 23 years later to Venice with the goods and ideas he had brought back from China.

  8. What Encouraged Exploration? • Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press in 1448-people could read accounts of previous explorers. • Nations seeking new sources of revenue. • Desire to spread Christianity • Generally curiosity about the world

  9. The Three G’s • Gold-Wealth of all kind • Glory-More land meant glory for their kingdoms • God- Convert the native people to Christianity After the Reformation there was competition between the Catholics and Protestants to win converts

  10. The PortuguesePrince Henry “The Navigator” Not an explorer but was a patron and sponsor Created a navigation school at Sagres, Portugal to encourage exploration Portugal was the first country to launch large-scale voyages of exploration

  11. What Prince Henry the Navigator Wanted • Prince Henry gathered scientists, cartographers-mapmakers- and other experts at his navigation school • Goal: to find a water route to Asia to allow Portugal to trade directly with the East • He died before the route was found. • Portugal learned a lot about the African coast line including that gold and slaves were plentiful!

  12. New Maritime Technology Hartman Astrolabe1532 Caravel: Faster, more economical. Could navigate shallow coastal waters and rivers. Lateen Sail: triangular sail Mariner’s Compass

  13. Improvements in Navigation • Better maps: follow coasts at first, used compass • Better ships: Caravels- square sails and new hull design, heavy enough to carry canon • Astrolabe- magnetic compass to sail by the stars • Knowledge of wind patterns The astrolabe was used to determine latitude, the north-south position on the globe, by measuring the height or altitude of celestial bodies over the horizon and making a calculation using the known declination of the star.

  14. Magnetic Compass

  15. Caravel

  16. The Portuguese • Go To • Africa and to Asia

  17. Portuguese in Bahrain • Built Forts to establish their presence.

  18. Bartolomeu Dias • Portuguese sailed for Portugal. • First European to round the Cape of Good Hope in 1488-did not make it to Asia • Dias accompanied Cabral on the voyage that resulted in the discovery of Brazil • Died in heavy seas off the African coast May 29, 1500.

  19. Vasco da Gama • Portuguese-sailed for Portugal • Opened a new water route for trade between Europe and Asia • 1497-98, the first to travel around the southern most tip of Africa, the Cape of Good Hope and reach India.

  20. Vasco da Gama • Very profitable voyage- returned with a cargo of spices and made a profit of several thousand percent. • Died of an illness in India on December 24, 1524

  21. Vasco da Gama First Voyage 1497–1499 Cape of Good Hope

  22. The Portuguese in Africa • King Affonso was the ruler of Kongo • Worked as a partner with the Portuguese to modernize his country into a Christian state • The Portuguese also wanted slaves • Initially slavery was limited to war captives, who were numerous because of various local battles and continual border disputes • When Affonso realized the toll the slave trade was taking on Kongo he wrote letters to the King of Portugal describing how his society was being ruined because of the slave trade • Affonso was not successful at stopping the slave trade.

  23. Ferdinand Magellan • Portuguese-sailed for Spain • Sailed around the southern tip of South America. • His crew was the first to circumnavigate-go around- the earth • This voyage: 1519-1522 proved that the world was round

  24. Magellan named the Pacific Ocean after the Latin word meaning peaceful.

  25. The Spaniards find the New World- By accident!

  26. The Spanish • Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand wanted Spain to be a united, Catholic kingdom • Inquisition- Ordered all Jews and Muslims to convert or leave Spain. Even Christians could be punished if they were suspected of defying the church. • They were eager to spread Catholicism and profit from new trade routes

  27. Christopher Columbus • From Genoa sailed for Spain • Convinced Queen Isabella to back his voyage • Believed that he could reach Asia, in the east, by sailing west • Did not know about American continents

  28. The First Voyage

  29. The First Voyage • Set sail on August 3, 1492 • Crew of 90 men, two caravels -the Niña and the Pinta- and his flagship, the Santa Maria • Near mutinous situation on the ship: terrible conditions voyage was taking far longer than thought • Columbus promised his men they would turn back if land was not spotted in three days

  30. The First Voyage • Landed in the Bahamas October 12, 1492 • He called it San Salvador • Called the native people ‘los Indios’ Inhabitants of the Indies • They were Tainos.

  31. Columbus Greeted by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella Upon His Return to Spain From the New World

  32. Other Voyages of Columbus • Columbus had a total of four voyages • Approach to natives and Spanish alike proved to be brutal in other voyages • Spanish colonists’ rebel and set up own colonies • Sent back to Spain in chains for being a tyrannical leader • May 11, 1502-Fouth voyage • Fernando, his son goes with him • Died in Spain believing he explored part of Asia

  33. Voyages of Christopher Columbus

  34. Spain and Portugal compete with each other for trade profits, so who gets what?

  35. Why is Portuguese Spoken in Brazil?

  36. The Treaty of Tordesillas The Pope Split the “New World” between Spain and Portugal • The Pope’s Line of Demarcation

  37. Treaty Details • The Treaty of Tordesillas was a treaty between Portugal and Spain in 1494 • Divided up all the land on the Earth outside of Europe, no matter who was already living there. • Pope Alexander VI was the pope at the time of the treaty. • He drew an imaginary line 480 kilometers to the west of the Cape Verde Islands, gave Portugal the land to the east of this line, and gave Spain the land to the west of this line. • King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella were the rulers of Spain at the time. • This treaty was signed at Tordesillas, hence the name of it.

  38. The Treaty of Tordesillas The House on the top center left to the tower is where the treaty was concluded in 1494 The treaty with the signatureof the sovereign of Spain and Portugal

  39. Amerigo Vespucci • Born in Florence, worked for the Medici and sailed for Spain • Sailed around the coast of South America and concluded it was not Asia but a new land. • America was later named after him for this vital discovery.

  40. The Columbian Exchange • An exchange between the Americas and the rest of the world. • Result of Columbus’s voyages to the New Word, • European horses and cattle changed the lifestyles of American Indians • European diseases like smallpox killed many American Indians

  41. Triangular Trade • Included slaves and manufactured goods

  42. The Columbian Exchange

  43. Disease • Smallpox, measles, and influenza • Natives had no immunity, or resistance, to disease • Wiped out village after village • By 1500 as much as 90% of the native population in the Caribbean had died • Great advantage to the Europeans wanting to take control of the indigenous people

  44. Horses on Boats!

  45. Impact of the Columbian Exchange • Europeans needed labor to farm the land: plantation system/Encomienda. • Shortage of labor to grow cash crops led to the use of slaves from the Americas and Africa. • Slavery was based on race.

  46. Encomienda System • Encomienda: the right of the Spanish government to use Native Americans as laborers but not necessarily as slaves. • Began in 1503 • Result of the plantation system: Destroyed the indigenous population and economics • Damaged the environment.

  47. Father Bartolomé de Las Casas • Dedicated his life to abolishing the Encomienda system. • Proposed replacing the slave labor of the natives with slaves from Africa. • He eventually recanted this as well, and became an advocate for the Africans in the colonies

  48. Middle Passage • The stage of triangular trade in which millions of people from Africa were taken to the New World • Ships departed Europe for Africa with manufactured goods, which were traded for purchased or kidnapped Africans • Africans were transported across the Atlantic • Slaves were then sold or traded for raw materials

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