Motivations for Exploration - Manatee School for the Arts
... Question 3: What Factors Created the Conditions for European Exploration ? ...
... Question 3: What Factors Created the Conditions for European Exploration ? ...
Spain
... Bahamas on the Caribbean Sea. • • These people were called the Taino, not Indians. • • Claimed the island for Spain ...
... Bahamas on the Caribbean Sea. • • These people were called the Taino, not Indians. • • Claimed the island for Spain ...
All About Spain - Stovka Social 8
... Bahamas on the Caribbean Sea. • These people were called the Taino, not Indians. • Claimed the island for Spain ...
... Bahamas on the Caribbean Sea. • These people were called the Taino, not Indians. • Claimed the island for Spain ...
America Before European Settlement
... going around Africa to Asia 1) wasn't shorter 2) wasn't cheaper In other words all of this did not help them get goods cheaper and bypass the Muslims! ...
... going around Africa to Asia 1) wasn't shorter 2) wasn't cheaper In other words all of this did not help them get goods cheaper and bypass the Muslims! ...
Henry as “The Navigator”
... After the Age of Discovery… • Native peoples in Africa, the Americas, and the Atlantic islands were terrorized, conquered, killed, enslaved, and/or forced to convert to Christianity. • As European colonization increased, native customs, languages, and religions vanished as the native people were gr ...
... After the Age of Discovery… • Native peoples in Africa, the Americas, and the Atlantic islands were terrorized, conquered, killed, enslaved, and/or forced to convert to Christianity. • As European colonization increased, native customs, languages, and religions vanished as the native people were gr ...
World Studies Chapter 3: Age of Exploration/Isolation Day Two
... I. Many Factors Encourage Exploration A. Wealth (The main reason) 1. Europeans enjoyed the spices and other luxury goods they got during the crusades. 2. Led to the countries of Europe wanting to find an all water route to Asia and break the monopoly the Italians and Muslims had on trade. B. Spread ...
... I. Many Factors Encourage Exploration A. Wealth (The main reason) 1. Europeans enjoyed the spices and other luxury goods they got during the crusades. 2. Led to the countries of Europe wanting to find an all water route to Asia and break the monopoly the Italians and Muslims had on trade. B. Spread ...
Exploration Powerpoint
... Portugal, captured the North African Muslim city of Ceuta • He was in search of gold, slaves, and also launched missionary efforts here to save the Muslims • Portuguese ships delivered over 150,000 slaves to Europe in the second half of the fifteenth century • Henry searched for a safe route around ...
... Portugal, captured the North African Muslim city of Ceuta • He was in search of gold, slaves, and also launched missionary efforts here to save the Muslims • Portuguese ships delivered over 150,000 slaves to Europe in the second half of the fifteenth century • Henry searched for a safe route around ...
Pre-Columbian time period. First Americans came from Asia
... •“granted” to deserving subjects of the King 2. Conquistador controlled Indian populations •Required Indians to pay tribute from their lands •Indians often rendered personal services as well. 3. In return the conquistador was obligated to •protect his wards •instruct them in the Christian faith •def ...
... •“granted” to deserving subjects of the King 2. Conquistador controlled Indian populations •Required Indians to pay tribute from their lands •Indians often rendered personal services as well. 3. In return the conquistador was obligated to •protect his wards •instruct them in the Christian faith •def ...
European Exploration
... Hispaniola where he established a trading post. Treaty of Tordesillas – an imaginary line drawn north to south in the Atlantic ocean; Spain controlled west of the line, Portugal east Amerigo Vespucci – Italian who reached America in 1499; had an important country named after him Juan Ponce de ...
... Hispaniola where he established a trading post. Treaty of Tordesillas – an imaginary line drawn north to south in the Atlantic ocean; Spain controlled west of the line, Portugal east Amerigo Vespucci – Italian who reached America in 1499; had an important country named after him Juan Ponce de ...
I. Encounters With Europe (1450-1550)
... Strong centralized governments not inclined to attempt long distance trade Example: China Weak rulers of the Iberian Peninsula left details of exploration to individuals like Christopher Columbus Spain and Portugal reason for dominance of Americas – helped by native population’s vulnerability to dis ...
... Strong centralized governments not inclined to attempt long distance trade Example: China Weak rulers of the Iberian Peninsula left details of exploration to individuals like Christopher Columbus Spain and Portugal reason for dominance of Americas – helped by native population’s vulnerability to dis ...
When Worlds Collide PPT
... Desire to bypass Moslem world’s monopoly on trade (luxury?) goods. Disruptions of overland routes (somewhat overrated). Intra-European rivalry. Curiosity. Rebirth of science and medicine due to contact with Muslim world (their Golden Age) led to vastly increased life span and population growth. End ...
... Desire to bypass Moslem world’s monopoly on trade (luxury?) goods. Disruptions of overland routes (somewhat overrated). Intra-European rivalry. Curiosity. Rebirth of science and medicine due to contact with Muslim world (their Golden Age) led to vastly increased life span and population growth. End ...
Early European Exploration - SheehyAPEuro
... resistance or incursions by other European powers. • The English seized Portuguese trading interests in Persia and India, and the Dutch moved into areas of China and the Spice Islands. After regaining its independence from Spain in 1640, Portugal managed to win back some of its former territories, b ...
... resistance or incursions by other European powers. • The English seized Portuguese trading interests in Persia and India, and the Dutch moved into areas of China and the Spice Islands. After regaining its independence from Spain in 1640, Portugal managed to win back some of its former territories, b ...
Exploration and Colonization
... In 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue! • Christopher Columbus: Italian, sailed for Spain seeking a ...
... In 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue! • Christopher Columbus: Italian, sailed for Spain seeking a ...
Independence High School Global History Regents Mr. Wisell Unit 1
... called the people living there “Indians.” It was not too many years before the ...
... called the people living there “Indians.” It was not too many years before the ...
Chapter 2: HISTORY
... 4. What were the main stimuli to European voyages of exploration during the Age of Discovery? Why did it end? There were two main stimuli: (1) encouragement of trade, and (2) military oneupsmanship. Trade between east and west had long been dependent on arduous and insecure desert caravan routes thr ...
... 4. What were the main stimuli to European voyages of exploration during the Age of Discovery? Why did it end? There were two main stimuli: (1) encouragement of trade, and (2) military oneupsmanship. Trade between east and west had long been dependent on arduous and insecure desert caravan routes thr ...
European Exploration PPT
... Motives for European Exploration 1. Crusades by-pass intermediaries to get to Asia. 2. Renaissance curiosity about other lands and peoples. ...
... Motives for European Exploration 1. Crusades by-pass intermediaries to get to Asia. 2. Renaissance curiosity about other lands and peoples. ...
Unit 4 The Age of Exploration
... • Amerigo Vespucci – Writes about voyages (“America”) • Nun˜ez de Balboa – Sails across Isthmus of Panama and into Pacific Ocean for Spain • Ferdinand Magellan –circumnavigates the Earth – sort of (death in Philippines) for Spain ...
... • Amerigo Vespucci – Writes about voyages (“America”) • Nun˜ez de Balboa – Sails across Isthmus of Panama and into Pacific Ocean for Spain • Ferdinand Magellan –circumnavigates the Earth – sort of (death in Philippines) for Spain ...
SS4H2 The student will describe European exploration in North
... The Taino had never before seen white men, clothed people, people with beards or ships like that - they thought these people must be from heaven. So the Taino came out to greet them, as was their custom, and brought the travelers - who surely must have been tired and hungry - food, drink and gifts. ...
... The Taino had never before seen white men, clothed people, people with beards or ships like that - they thought these people must be from heaven. So the Taino came out to greet them, as was their custom, and brought the travelers - who surely must have been tired and hungry - food, drink and gifts. ...
ageofexploration2
... going around Africa to Asia 1) wasn't shorter 2) wasn't cheaper In other words all of this did not help them get goods cheaper and bypass the Muslims! ...
... going around Africa to Asia 1) wasn't shorter 2) wasn't cheaper In other words all of this did not help them get goods cheaper and bypass the Muslims! ...
explorationandcolonizationofeuropeUSE
... East to Europe went through 2 Italian cities (Venice & Genoa) -Italian merchants marked up the prices on the goods & sold them throughout Europe ...
... East to Europe went through 2 Italian cities (Venice & Genoa) -Italian merchants marked up the prices on the goods & sold them throughout Europe ...
Chapter 15.2 ppt
... Why do you think Columbus was so cruel to the Natives he encountered? What was one result of European exploration of the Americas? ...
... Why do you think Columbus was so cruel to the Natives he encountered? What was one result of European exploration of the Americas? ...
La,, Id /*s ,e - TBAISD Moodle
... she discovered an Indian plot to kill him. 33. Vera Cruz - It was a coastal city with a good harbor founded by Cortes. It is located up the coast from the Yucatan peninsula. 34. Montezuma - He was “The Chief of Men.” As head of the Aztec government he was looked upon as nearly a god. He found very u ...
... she discovered an Indian plot to kill him. 33. Vera Cruz - It was a coastal city with a good harbor founded by Cortes. It is located up the coast from the Yucatan peninsula. 34. Montezuma - He was “The Chief of Men.” As head of the Aztec government he was looked upon as nearly a god. He found very u ...
Chapter 7
... lived on the earth and who would one day return • Incas-Indian civilization located on the western edge of South America • Cuzco-capital of the Incan empire where large buildings were built out of stone with great precision ...
... lived on the earth and who would one day return • Incas-Indian civilization located on the western edge of South America • Cuzco-capital of the Incan empire where large buildings were built out of stone with great precision ...
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.