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The Age of Exploration - Fort Thomas Independent Schools
The Age of Exploration - Fort Thomas Independent Schools

... Causes of Exploration • Renaissance ideas of humanism and intellectual progress • God: Reformation and CounterReformation create desires to convert people to religions • Gold: Desire for Luxury Goods and ...
Early European Exploration - sunrise
Early European Exploration - sunrise

... sometime around the year 1000. These expert sailors and warriors were originally from Scandinavia (Norway, Sweden & Denmark), but had established colonies in Iceland and Greenland by the late 900s. It was from these colonies that the Vikings set out to further explore the seas to the west. The Vikin ...
The West and the Changing World Balance
The West and the Changing World Balance

... (such as Mongols) to the north • Focused on building Chinese agriculture ...
The Age of Exploration powerpoint
The Age of Exploration powerpoint

... from Greenland who sailed the northern Atlantic Ocean and settled briefly in North America, which he called Vinland. ...
Discovering the Americas
Discovering the Americas

... • Trade develops with African nations – Traded bowls and beads for fresh water and food. ...
Quiz name: European History and Latin American History
Quiz name: European History and Latin American History

... Goods were used to purchase people as slave by Europeans. These people were then shipped to the Americas and sold into slavery. The goods produced were shipped back to Europe. This describes... ...
EXPLORERS Bartolomeu Dias- Portuguese Sailed for Portugal The
EXPLORERS Bartolomeu Dias- Portuguese Sailed for Portugal The

... The first European exploration of North America Objective: To find an alternative route to China Died of natural causes Ponce de Leon- Spain Spain He became the first Governor of Puerto Rico by appointment of the Spanish crown. He led the first known European expedition to La Florida, which he named ...
Explorers
Explorers

... When you finish review your answers, and we will go over them as a class. ...
Chapter 2: Europe Looks Outward
Chapter 2: Europe Looks Outward

... • In the 1400s, most thought that the world was flat. Columbus’ voyage proved otherwise. ...
Chapter 4: How and Why Europeans Came to the New World
Chapter 4: How and Why Europeans Came to the New World

... and West. It always points north and uses the Earth’s magnetic pole. Works in any weather. Let sailors know the direction they were traveling in. 3. Maps: drawings of the shapes of bodies of land and water. They also show where key physical features are (good places to ...
European Powers dividing the New World
European Powers dividing the New World

... divided and controlled the world during the Age of Exploration ...
Early Voyages of Exploration Chapter 3 Lesson 4
Early Voyages of Exploration Chapter 3 Lesson 4

... • Finally, in the fall of 1520, three of Magellan’s ships sailed through what is now known as the Straight of Magellan, near the southern tip of South America. • They found the same ocean Balboa found and named is Pacific, meaning “peaceful” ...
Notes Page One Name: Social Studies Seven/PD: _____ Notes
Notes Page One Name: Social Studies Seven/PD: _____ Notes

... and willing to sail. Within a short time, Portuguese shipbuilders created a new design – the caravel. Caravels were small ships that used rudders, triangular sails, and sailing instruments. In addition, they had very large storage spaces that were perfect for trading goods (known as a cargo hold). P ...
Lesson 5 - Routes of Exploration to the New World Section 1
Lesson 5 - Routes of Exploration to the New World Section 1

... him about a great river that flowed south all the way to the Gulf of Mexico. La Salle dreamed not only of personal wealth but also of a French empire of trading posts, forts, and settlements. King Louis XIV of France liked La Salle’s plan, but the king wanted La Salle to pay for the journey himself. ...
Age of exploration - Lake County Schools
Age of exploration - Lake County Schools

... Far East. • Seeking a quicker route to India and China then around the southern tip of Africa, Spanish explorers sailed west across the Atlantic. • Christopher Columbus ...
the new world encountered
the new world encountered

... In the 1400s European sailors sailed along western Europe, the Mediterranean, and the west coast of Africa, usually staying within the sight of land. The reason for this was that ships were not able to navigate easily. They usually depended upon the compass, a log book, and lookouts. Anxious to expl ...
Renaissance Practice Exam*Introduction and the Arts
Renaissance Practice Exam*Introduction and the Arts

... Reformation Reasons that Europe set out to explore the seas in the 1400s and 1500s? Which nation led the way? Columbus’s arguments to persuade Spain to finance his voyage across the Atlantic to Asia? Key goods in the Columbian Exchange ...
I. The rise of Mesoamerican Empires: Olmec, Mayan, Aztec and Inca
I. The rise of Mesoamerican Empires: Olmec, Mayan, Aztec and Inca

... -in 1492 their armies were able to defeat the last of the Muslims in Granada in southern Spain. B. Expulsion of Moors (Spanish Muslims) and Jews -Ferdinand and Isabella forced all citizens to ...
The Age of Exploration
The Age of Exploration

... ► France set up Fur trade with the Native American in “New France which was Ohio River valley to the Mississippi River and up into Canada. ► England (Great Britain) claimed the land along the Atlantic Ocean called it the thirteen colonies. ...
File unit 7 - My Teacher Pages
File unit 7 - My Teacher Pages

... (political) Glory (economic) Gold (religious) God The conquistadors, or the conquerors emerge for all three reasons. ...
Name: Date: ______ Period: ______ On June 7, 1494, the
Name: Date: ______ Period: ______ On June 7, 1494, the

... the “New World” of the Americas between the two superpowers of exploration. Spain and Portugal divided the New World by drawing a line in the Atlantic Ocean, about 370 leagues west of the Cape Verde Islands, then controlled by Portugal. All lands east of that line (about 46 degrees, 37 minutes West) ...
Ch. 3 Europeans Reach the Americas
Ch. 3 Europeans Reach the Americas

... Ferdinand Magellan was a Portuguese adventurer and noble who entered the service of Spain set sail from Spain in 1519 with 5 ships and 250 crew men to sail across the Pacific. ► After much hardship the sailed into the Pacific Ocean after sailing around the tip of South America.  Sailors were forced ...
Contact - Hart County Schools
Contact - Hart County Schools

... •Spain will not enter the Age of Exploration until they can unite Spain in 1469. •They will expel the Muslims from Granada in 1492. ...
AE02 - John Bowne High School
AE02 - John Bowne High School

... Their legs swelled and other parts of their bodies also; and these swellings spread until the sufferer died. At the end of our long voyage, however, Da Gama acquired a cargo of spices that was later sold for a profit of three-thousand percent [3,000%]. The demand for spice from the Middle East and A ...
Exploration and Expansion Section 1
Exploration and Expansion Section 1

... • Spain also eager to seek out new routes to riches of East • 1492, Spanish rulers agreed to pay for voyage by Italian sailor ...
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Age of Discovery



The Age of Discovery is an informal and loosely defined European historical period from the 15th century to the 18th century, marking the time in which extensive overseas exploration emerged as a powerful factor in European culture. It was the period in which global exploration started with the Portuguese discovery of the Atlantic archipelago of the Azores, the western coast of Africa, and discovery of the ocean route to the East in 1498, and the trans-Atlantic Ocean discovery of the Americas on behalf of the Crown of Castile (Spain) in 1492. These expeditions led to numerous naval expeditions across the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific oceans, and land expeditions in the Americas, Asia, Africa, and Australia that continued into the late 19th century, and ended with the exploration of the polar regions in the 20th century. European overseas exploration led to the rise of global trade and the European colonial empires, with the contact between the Old World, Europe, Asia and Africa, and the New World, the Americas, producing the Columbian Exchange: a wide transfer of plants, animals, food, human populations (including slaves), communicable diseases and culture between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres. This represented one of the most-significant global events concerning ecology, agriculture, and culture in history. European exploration allowed the global mapping of the world, resulting in a new world-view and distant civilizations coming into contact.
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