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The New World

The New World. Exploration and Colonization. Review. Portuguese Treaty of Tordesillas Spanish Armada and the ‘Sea Dogs’ Lost Colony Key Colonies (significance of Jamestown) Enlightenment/Renaissance English Protest Reformation Puritans/Separatists Mayflower Compact

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The New World

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  1. The New World Exploration and Colonization

  2. Review • Portuguese • Treaty of Tordesillas • Spanish Armada and the ‘Sea Dogs’ • Lost Colony • Key Colonies (significance of Jamestown) • Enlightenment/Renaissance • English Protest Reformation • Puritans/Separatists • Mayflower Compact • Virginia House of Burgesses • Fundamental Orders of Connecticut • Joint-Stock Companies

  3. Who really ‘discovered’ America?

  4. Did Pocahontas really save John Smith’s life? • Leader of Jamestown • Captured by Powhatan • ‘saved’ Jamestown • Natives shared food • Conflict • John Rolfe (Pocahontas, tobacco)

  5. Natives (agriculture, architecture, mathematics, language, sacrifice, torture) • Columbus • Norsemen (Leif Eriksson) • Amerigo Vespucci

  6. A Tobacco Society English incentive to migrate to the New World • Headright • Cheap land • High wages

  7. ***colonization would provide work for the unemployed, increase English trade, easy profits through raids ***negative aspects- high expectations, natives, work load, cultural/geographical differences, Spanish spies, disease, starvation, mismanagement

  8. American Colonial Rights English citizens. established colonial governments that would support self-government and the protection of individual rights. Protestantism called for independent churches which used self-government. This was a contrast to what citizens of England were used to under Catholicism which relies on a centralized hierarchy. Three of these colonial governments were: Virginia House of Burgesses Mayflower Compact Fundamental Orders of Connecticut The long distance from a centralized government and existence under salutary neglect caused the colonists to become self-governing and politically self-sufficient. It would not be until the British government threatened the status of American colonists’ self-government that the colonists decided to rebel.

  9. New England Colonies • close-knit, well-ordered families • family was the basis of the economy with labor divided along gender lines. • Settlers clustered near the town center, building churches and schools. • Society was male-dominated and women mistrusted

  10. New York and New Jersey • The growth of the English colonies led the Dutch West India Company to promote migration to their New Netherland colony. • Competition with England caused a series of three wars that transferred New Netherland to the English. • King Charles II gave the colony to his brother the Duke of York and renamed it New York. • New York boasted the most heterogeneous society in North America.

  11. Rhode Island • Puritans emigrated for religious freedom • were not tolerant of other religious viewpoints. • Thomas Hooker disagreed with church policy, founded Connecticut. • Roger Williams was banished because of his views on religious tolerance and founded the colony of Rhode Island. • Ann Hutchinson and her followers moved to Rhode Island.

  12. Pennsylvania • King Charles II repaid a debt to William Penn's father by granting the younger Penn a huge territory west of the Delaware River. • Penn was a Quaker and established his colony as a "holy experiment“ for the “Society of Friends” • City of Brotherly Love • Commerce and culture • Direct spiritual communication with God • Persecuted

  13. The Glorious Revolution • 1685, King James II attempted to increase royal control by combining New York, New Jersey, and the New England colonies into the Dominion of New England. • Colonial governments were disbanded and Anglican forms of worship were imposed. • The Glorious Revolution of 1688 overthrew King James and colonial revolts broke out in favor of the Glorious Revolution. • Parliament installed William and Mary as king and queen. • The new rulers abolished the Dominion of New England and colonists revived assemblies and returned to self-government.

  14. Evolution of Chesapeake • Surplus of tobacco • Cost decreases in Europe • Reduces planters’ profits • Mortality rates decline • Formation of a planter elite POLARIZATION Navigation Acts of 1650/60 (mercantilism)

  15. Carolinas • Carolina was chartered but soon divided into a northern and a southern colony. • North Carolina was home to 5,000 small farmers and large tobacco planters, many from Virginia. • South Carolina, settlers from the sugar colony from Barbados created a plantation region with a large African slave population.

  16. Conflict • intertribal and inter-colonial rivalry stimulated violence that extended from Santa Fe to Hudson's Bay. • Massive violence broke out in South Carolina in the 1670s as colonists began large-scale Indian slave trade.

  17. In 1689, England and France began almost 75 years of warfare over control of the North American interior. • English gains in the fur trade led to the outbreak of King William's War, (War of the League of Augsburg) in Europe. • England feared loss of control of the colonies and replaced proprietary rule with royal rule. • This signified the tightening of imperial reigns over the colonies of North America.

  18. Nathaniel Bacon: Bacon’s Rebellion • In the 1670s, conflicts erupted between Virginia settlers and Native Americans over land • Nathaniel Bacon demanded the death or removal of all Indians from the colony. • The governor attempted to suppress unauthorized military expeditions. • Bacon and his followers rebelled against Virginia's royal governor • Stormed Jamestown • When Bacon died of dysentery, his rebellion collapsed. Significance: rebellion against government authority, clash between rich/poor and east/west, greater reliance on African slave labor.

  19. King Phillip’s War • Relations between the Plymouth colonists and Natives deteriorated in the 1670s. • The colonists attempted to gain sovereign authority over the land of King Philip (Metacom). • After peaceful coexistence lasting forty years, the Indians realized that the colonists were interested in domination. • King Philip led an alliance of Indian peoples against the colonists. • partly due to an alliance between the Iroquois Confederacy and the English, King Philip's War ended in defeat.

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