1 / 22

The American Indians and Their European Counterparts

The American Indians and Their European Counterparts. In the early 1800’s European settlers and American Indians began trading among themselves on the various harbors and rivers of North America.

leila-quinn
Télécharger la présentation

The American Indians and Their European Counterparts

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. The American Indians and Their European Counterparts • In the early 1800’s European settlers and American Indians began trading among themselves on the various harbors and rivers of North America. • In earlier years American Indian out numbered the Europeans by 70,000 to 100,000, which is more than Europe’s population within the next two centuries

  2. Interdependence • The American Indians taught the Europeans: -Make canoes -Build shelters -Make buckskin clothes -Plant new cropsiI • In return, the Europeans gave the American Indians: -firearms -textiles -steel tools

  3. Immunity becomes a struggle • The Europeans also brought along with them diseases that the American Indians had no knowledge of. • This also meant that the American Indians were not immune to the diseases. • Smallpox was one of the major epidemics the Europeans exposed to them. • Smallpox alone would at times kill off entire village populations.

  4. Victory and loss • Few American Indians survived the horrors of smallpox. That was their victory. • Their European counter parts survived because they were immune. • The American Indians then suffered loss by being forced to leave settlements.

  5. Explorers’ Writings • The first detailed European observation of life on this vast continent were recorded in Spanish and French by explorers of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. • Christopher Columbus, Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, were the famous explorers of the “New World”.

  6. Cabeza de Vaca’s Expedition • Was the second explorer after Christopher Columbus. • Searched for 8 years to find other Europeans to help them get home. • Provides first accounts of new animals and plants.

  7. The Salem Witchcraft Trials • During the cold winter of 1691-1692 the daughter of the minister in Salem began to dabble in magic. • In the next ten months about 150 people were accused of witchcraft. • Between June and September 19 people were hanged, and one man, Giles Corey, who had refused to plead either innocent or guilty, was crushed to death under a pile of stones.

  8. Puritan Legacy • Puritan is a broad term, referring to a number of Protestant groups that, beginning about 1560s, sought to “purify” the Church of England, which since the time of Henry VIII. • Many Puritans suffered persecution in England. • English Protestants, set sail in 1620 and hoped to build a new society patterned after God’s word.

  9. Encounters and Foundations to 1800 • Explorers’ Writings • Cabeza de Vaca’s Expedition • The Salem Witchcraft Trials • The Puritan Legacy

  10. Puritan Beliefs ♥The Puritans had to grapple with complex uncertainties. At the center of Puritan theology was an uneasy mixture of certainty and doubt. ♦The certainty was that because of Adam and Eve’s sin of disobedience, most of humanity would be damned for all eternity. However, the Puritans were also certain that God in his mercy had sent his son Jesus Christ to earth to save particular people. ♦The doubt centered on whether a particular individual was one of the saved or one of the damned.

  11. Puritan Beliefs: Continued • How did you know if you were saved or damned? As it turns out you did not know. • A theology that was so clear-uncut in its division of termining which were which. • There were two principal indications were saved by the grace of God, and you could feel this grace arriving in an intensely emotional fashion. • After receiving grace, you were “reborn” as a member of the community of saints, and you behaved like a saint. • This was coincidentally, the ideal qualities needed to carve out a new society in a strange land.

  12. Puritan Politics: Government by Contract Puritan view a covenant, or contract, or contract, existed between God and humanity. This spiritual covenant was a useful model for worldly social organization as well: Puritans believed that people should enter freely into agreements concerning their government. On the other hand, because the Puritans believed the saintly elect should exert great influence on government, their political views tended to be undemocratic. There was little room for compromise.

  13. The Bible in America • The Puritans read the Bible as the story of the creation, fall, wanderings, and rescue of the human race. Within this long and complex narrative, each Puritan could see connections to events in his or her own life or to events in the life as a pilgrimage, or journey, to salvation. • The Puritans believed that the Bible was the literal word of God. Reading the Bible was a necessity for all Puritans, as was the ability to understand theological debates. • Their beliefs required to Puritans to keep a close watch on both their spiritual and their public lives. This focus of the Puritan mind greatly affected their writings.

  14. The Age of reason began in Europe with the philosophers and scientist of the 17th and 18th centuries who called themselves rationalists. Rationalism- is the belief that human beings can arrive at truth by using reason , rather than by relying on the authority of the past , on religious faith, or on intuition. Sir Isaac Newton formulated the laws of gravity and motion, compared god to a clockmaker. Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727) www.newton.ac.uk/newtlife.html The Age of Reason: Tinkerers and Experimenters

  15. The Age of Reason: Tinkerers and Experimenters (cont.) • According to the rationalists, then, everyone has the capacity to regulate and improve his or her own life. • From the earliest colonial days Americans had to be generalists and tinkerers ; they had to make do with what was on hand , and they had to achieve results.

  16. The Smallpox Plague • The unlikely hero of the Americas first foray into scientific exploration was the strict Puritan minister Cotton Mather.

  17. Smallpox was cured by a Turkish physician the Method was called inoculation. Mather succeeded in inoculating 300 people. An unlikely cure And a practical approach to change.

  18. An unlikely cure And a practical approach to change cont. • The smallpox controversy illustrates two interesting points about American life. First it shows that contradictory qualities of the American character existed side by side. Mather’s experiment also reveals that a practical approach to social change and scientific research was necessary in america.

  19. Deism: Are people basically good? Like the Puritans the rationalist discovered God through the medium of the natural world, but in a different way. It seemed much more reasonable to believe that God had made it possible for all people at all times to discover the natural laws through their God-given power of reason. This outlook was called deism, it was shared by many eighteenth-century thinkers, including many founders of the American nation. Since they all came from different religious backgrounds they wouldn’t support specific religious groups. Instead they sought the principles of united groups.

  20. Deism: Are people basically good? Deist believed that the universe was orderly and good. In contrast to the Puritans they stressed humanity’s goodness. Therefore to them the best form of worship was to do good for others. There already existed in America an impulse to improve people’s lives such as Cotton Mather’s struggle to save Boston from smallpox illustrates. Deism elevated this impulse to one of the nation’s highest goals. The arguments presented in the Declaration of Independence are based on rationalist assumptions about the relations between people, God, and natural law.

  21. Self-made Americans Most of the literature written in the American Colonies during the Age of Reason was, understandably rooted in reality. Following the Revolutionary War (1775-1783), the problems of organizing and governing the new nation were of the highest importance.

  22. Self-made Americans The unquestioned masterpiece of the American Age of Reason is the Autobiography by Benjamin Franklin. Franklin used the autobiography narrative, a form common in Puritan writing and omitted its religious justification. It is still found in the countless biographies and autobiographies of self-made men and women that appear on the best sellers lists today.

More Related