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Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance. New Empires in the East and West . On the Brink of a New World. Those who had gone before…MAYBE Magical Kingdom of Prester John (12 th century tale that a Christian kingdom existed in the East)
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Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West
On the Brink of a New World • Those who had gone before…MAYBE • Magical Kingdom of Prester John (12th century tale that a Christian kingdom existed in the East) • Travelogues of Marco Polo (13TH century - Asia) • The Travels of John Mandeville (14th century – Supposed adventures in the East) • Motives: God, Glory, Gold • Economic motives • Access to the East – spices, silk, coffee • The New World of the West – gold, silver, coffee, sugar, tobacco • National and personal pride/fame • Religious Zeal • Jesuits, Franciscans, Dominicans,
Means • Centralization of political authority • Maps • new maps – more advanced cartography • Ships and Sailing • Naval technology – compass, astrolabe, back-staff, lateen (triangular) sail coupled with square sail • Increased size and structure of ships • Knowledge of wind patterns
Back-Staff Cross-Staff
The Development of a Portuguese Maritime Empire • In Search of Spices • Travel the coast of Africa searching for all-water route • 1511 – Albuquerque wants to control Malacca = destroy Arab trade & provide a way station on route to Moluccas (Spice Islands) • Reasons for Success • Excellent naval technology • More advanced weaponry (gun ships) • Unable to maintain long-term empire abroad • Lacked the power as a European nation • Lacked the population necessary to expand abroad • Lacked the desire to colonize Asia
Map 14.1: Discoveries and Possessions in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries Treaty of Tordesillas (1494) – decreed by Spanish pope Alexander VI, that all trade to the west go to Spain and to the east to Portugal.
The Spanish Empire in the New World • Administration of the Spanish Empire • Encomienda – natives = subjects of Castile (taxed and put to work) to be protected, paid and spiritually supervised – instead they were exploited and abused • Anton Montecino and Bartholome las Casas decry abuse • Encomienda abolished in 1542!! • Viceroys &– chief civil and military officer to the king (in Mexico City and Lima) • audiencias – advisory group that also functioned as supreme judicial body • The Church – Spanish monarchs allowed to appoint bishops & clergy, build churches, collect fees, supervise religious orders in New World; Spanish Inquisition in Peru (1570) and Mexico (1571)
Consequences: intended or otherwise • In your opinion, in what way(s) did exploration of 15th and 16th centuries impact the conquerors and the conquered the most
Price Revolution (aka Inflation) • Price revolution (a very slow “revolution”) • rise in prices = fall in value of currency Causes for the Price Revolution • “Bullionism” influx of gold & silver bullion, provided primarily by Spain • Increase in population also increases demand for land and food = higher prices • Who suffers from higher prices? • Peasant and laborer wages rose the least = drop in standard of living • Some governments – excessive borrowing from bankers = new and higher taxes • Who benefits? • Landowners and Entrepreneurs profit from higher rents, higher prices, bigger markets, and cheap labor costs • Increased Social Tension • Continuing cracks in breakdown of feudal society; clergy vs. laity, nobility vs. peasantry, urban elite vs. guilds/artisans