CHAPTER 22
... to southeast Asia and the Philippines. Travel for Muslim pilgrims and cholars was common under Mongol rule. Christian missionaries also traveled to ea t Asia, but less frequently. • Cultural diffusion. These routes became an important source of new id as and information throughout Eurasia. New cro ...
... to southeast Asia and the Philippines. Travel for Muslim pilgrims and cholars was common under Mongol rule. Christian missionaries also traveled to ea t Asia, but less frequently. • Cultural diffusion. These routes became an important source of new id as and information throughout Eurasia. New cro ...
2ImpactoftheAgeofExploration PPT
... materials and precious metals entered Europe. New trade centers developed, especially in the Netherlands and England. ■ Exploration and trade led to the growth of capitalism. This system is based on investing money for profit. Merchants gained great wealth by trading and selling goods from around th ...
... materials and precious metals entered Europe. New trade centers developed, especially in the Netherlands and England. ■ Exploration and trade led to the growth of capitalism. This system is based on investing money for profit. Merchants gained great wealth by trading and selling goods from around th ...
Marco Polo Voyages
... New Laws • The new laws were meant to end abuses against the Native Americans • Spain too far away to enforce them • Many Natives were forced to become peons, workers forced to labor for a landlord in order to pay off debt. ...
... New Laws • The new laws were meant to end abuses against the Native Americans • Spain too far away to enforce them • Many Natives were forced to become peons, workers forced to labor for a landlord in order to pay off debt. ...
File
... such as spices – Europeans never had these items (nutmeg, pepper, etc.) until during the crusades. After the crusades ended, there was still a high demand – Europeans sought their own route to trade directly with Asia ...
... such as spices – Europeans never had these items (nutmeg, pepper, etc.) until during the crusades. After the crusades ended, there was still a high demand – Europeans sought their own route to trade directly with Asia ...
Ch - edl.io
... 2. After three voyages, Columbus insisted that he had reached the Indian Ocean and had found Asia, but other Europeans realized he had discovered entirely new lands. The new discoveries led the Spanish and Portuguese to sign the Treaty of Tordesillas, in which they divided the world between them alo ...
... 2. After three voyages, Columbus insisted that he had reached the Indian Ocean and had found Asia, but other Europeans realized he had discovered entirely new lands. The new discoveries led the Spanish and Portuguese to sign the Treaty of Tordesillas, in which they divided the world between them alo ...
The Age of Exploration
... A. Europeans were not the first to ______________ the oceans in search of new ____________________________________________ 1. ____________________ merchants explored the Indian Ocean & had dominated the Asian ___________________________________ for centuries before European exploration 2. From ...
... A. Europeans were not the first to ______________ the oceans in search of new ____________________________________________ 1. ____________________ merchants explored the Indian Ocean & had dominated the Asian ___________________________________ for centuries before European exploration 2. From ...
Chapter 16: The World Economy - World History with Mrs. Roser
... Loose colonial administrations led by gold-hungry Europeans Become more formal administrations as agricultural settlements were established under bureaucrats who arrived from Europe ...
... Loose colonial administrations led by gold-hungry Europeans Become more formal administrations as agricultural settlements were established under bureaucrats who arrived from Europe ...
The Age of Exploration
... • Describe how each country listed below contributed to the Age of Exploration. – Spain – Portugal ...
... • Describe how each country listed below contributed to the Age of Exploration. – Spain – Portugal ...
Age of Exploration
... The Dutch had colonies in Netherlands (the Dutch) America & Africa, but the allowed private companies Dutch East India to fund exploration Company dominated trade in Asia ...
... The Dutch had colonies in Netherlands (the Dutch) America & Africa, but the allowed private companies Dutch East India to fund exploration Company dominated trade in Asia ...
Exploration PPT
... The Dutch had colonies in Netherlands (the Dutch) America & Africa, but the allowed private companies Dutch East India to fund exploration Company dominated trade in Asia ...
... The Dutch had colonies in Netherlands (the Dutch) America & Africa, but the allowed private companies Dutch East India to fund exploration Company dominated trade in Asia ...
The Maritime Revolution
... produce a financial return, first from trade in slaves, and then from the gold trade ...
... produce a financial return, first from trade in slaves, and then from the gold trade ...
TIMELINE: The Age of Exploration
... between the New World and the Old World is known as the Columbian Exchange. *In 1501, Amerigo Vespucci sailed along the coast of Brazil. He went home to Italy and told folks that this was not Asia. In Florence, he sought out Lorenzo de Medici, Europe’s richest banker. Medici popularized Vespucci. Bo ...
... between the New World and the Old World is known as the Columbian Exchange. *In 1501, Amerigo Vespucci sailed along the coast of Brazil. He went home to Italy and told folks that this was not Asia. In Florence, he sought out Lorenzo de Medici, Europe’s richest banker. Medici popularized Vespucci. Bo ...
The Age of Exploration
... Which countries were involved in this exploration? What was the Columbian Exchange? ...
... Which countries were involved in this exploration? What was the Columbian Exchange? ...
Unit 2, Section 1 Test
... horses, cannons, and guns. More importantly, the Native Americans did not have immunity to the diseases, which the Spanish brought with them. 10. New Spain and Peru were Spain’s two most important colonies in the Americas. 11. Because of the Treaty of Tordesillas Brazil became a colony of Portugal. ...
... horses, cannons, and guns. More importantly, the Native Americans did not have immunity to the diseases, which the Spanish brought with them. 10. New Spain and Peru were Spain’s two most important colonies in the Americas. 11. Because of the Treaty of Tordesillas Brazil became a colony of Portugal. ...
European Exploration - Northwest ISD Moodle
... • Columbus was searching for a faster route to Asia.. • October 12, 1492 Columbus landed on what he believed was the Indies • He thought he was in India, but he really had “discovered” the New World ...
... • Columbus was searching for a faster route to Asia.. • October 12, 1492 Columbus landed on what he believed was the Indies • He thought he was in India, but he really had “discovered” the New World ...
Study Guide - Unit 3
... China: many navigational inventions[sternpost rudder, lateen sails, astrolabe, magnetic compass]; relied on regional trade; Japan: prohibited foreign trade ...
... China: many navigational inventions[sternpost rudder, lateen sails, astrolabe, magnetic compass]; relied on regional trade; Japan: prohibited foreign trade ...
Chapter 1: The New World The First Americans Plummeting sea
... o Scandinavians discovered “new world” before Columbus o Renaissance led to European expansion ...
... o Scandinavians discovered “new world” before Columbus o Renaissance led to European expansion ...
An Age of Explorations and Isolation ch 3 unit 1
... Huge storm arose, battered ships; realized his ships were blown around the tip Explored SE coast but crew was exhausted so they returned home ...
... Huge storm arose, battered ships; realized his ships were blown around the tip Explored SE coast but crew was exhausted so they returned home ...
European Exploration - Northwest ISD Moodle
... of the King and the English Bill of Rights protected individual rights of Englishmen ...
... of the King and the English Bill of Rights protected individual rights of Englishmen ...
Ch 15 The Maritime Revolution
... began to produce a financial return, first from trade in slaves, and then from the gold trade ...
... began to produce a financial return, first from trade in slaves, and then from the gold trade ...
Age of Exploration and Isolation - Mr Dean`s Social Studies Webpage
... by sailing west across the Atlantic • Columbus thought he reached the Indies, really opened the way for European colonization of the Americas • Immediate impact was that it increased tension between Spain and Portugal ...
... by sailing west across the Atlantic • Columbus thought he reached the Indies, really opened the way for European colonization of the Americas • Immediate impact was that it increased tension between Spain and Portugal ...
The Age of Exploration and Discovery
... • Economic- spices and luxuries in the far east, quest for silver and gold that was becoming more scarce in Europe ...
... • Economic- spices and luxuries in the far east, quest for silver and gold that was becoming more scarce in Europe ...
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.