Age of Exploration - CatawbaSocialStudies
... Europeans couldn’t travel across land because the Ottoman Empire would attack them. ...
... Europeans couldn’t travel across land because the Ottoman Empire would attack them. ...
Portuguese sailing for Spain
... • Prince Henry the Navigator Portugal - Funded Exploration down coast of Africa - 1419-1460 • Vasco da Gama - Portugal - Opened trade with India - Placed Portugal in position to dominate trade with India ...
... • Prince Henry the Navigator Portugal - Funded Exploration down coast of Africa - 1419-1460 • Vasco da Gama - Portugal - Opened trade with India - Placed Portugal in position to dominate trade with India ...
Age of Exploration and Isolation
... ► Colonization will become a race to convert native peoples to a particular brand of Christianity ► Jesuits (Catholics) are some of the most active ...
... ► Colonization will become a race to convert native peoples to a particular brand of Christianity ► Jesuits (Catholics) are some of the most active ...
4a Motivations and Explorers
... • Why did Europeans go exploring? • Demand for gold, spices, and natural resources in Europe –Used to flavor and preserve food, make medicines and perfumes ...
... • Why did Europeans go exploring? • Demand for gold, spices, and natural resources in Europe –Used to flavor and preserve food, make medicines and perfumes ...
Age of Early European Explorations & Conquests
... and wealth to dominate trade in the Indian Ocean. 2. Dutch arrive in India in 1595. ...
... and wealth to dominate trade in the Indian Ocean. 2. Dutch arrive in India in 1595. ...
Exploration #1
... was able to prove that ships could reach Asia by sailing around the tip of Africa. 4.In 1497, the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama became the 1st explorer to reach India by sailing around the tip of Africa. ...
... was able to prove that ships could reach Asia by sailing around the tip of Africa. 4.In 1497, the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama became the 1st explorer to reach India by sailing around the tip of Africa. ...
European Exploration
... luxury goods from Asia after the fall of the Roman Empire. How did the goods get to Europe? Who got rich on this trade? Answer these in complete sentences. ...
... luxury goods from Asia after the fall of the Roman Empire. How did the goods get to Europe? Who got rich on this trade? Answer these in complete sentences. ...
File
... India. The flow of these goods to Europe was controlled by Italian merchants, who charged high prices for the rare goods. Many of the explorers hoped to find new, faster routes to Asia that they could use to gain a foothold in this trade. Wealth was not the only goal that drove people to explore, th ...
... India. The flow of these goods to Europe was controlled by Italian merchants, who charged high prices for the rare goods. Many of the explorers hoped to find new, faster routes to Asia that they could use to gain a foothold in this trade. Wealth was not the only goal that drove people to explore, th ...
File
... and the America’s. Portugal began to explore the west coast of Africa during the mid- 1400’s. They established the first Europe-Asian water trade route. Vasco da Gama was the first explorer to make it from Portugal to India. He began his voyage in 1497 and reached India in 1498. Ferdinand Magellan b ...
... and the America’s. Portugal began to explore the west coast of Africa during the mid- 1400’s. They established the first Europe-Asian water trade route. Vasco da Gama was the first explorer to make it from Portugal to India. He began his voyage in 1497 and reached India in 1498. Ferdinand Magellan b ...
Age of Exploration- Svenja
... Europeans used spices to preserve meat, hide the bad taste of bad/ spoilt food and to make themselves smell better France: The Indies Portugal was the first land to successfully get an explorer to the Indies Christopher Columbus thought he could do that too but by sailing the other way- saw No ...
... Europeans used spices to preserve meat, hide the bad taste of bad/ spoilt food and to make themselves smell better France: The Indies Portugal was the first land to successfully get an explorer to the Indies Christopher Columbus thought he could do that too but by sailing the other way- saw No ...
Age of Early European Explorations & Conquests
... 2. A New Player Europe Nicolo, Maffeo, & Marco Polo, 1271 Expansion becomes a state enterprise monarchs had the authority & the resources. ...
... 2. A New Player Europe Nicolo, Maffeo, & Marco Polo, 1271 Expansion becomes a state enterprise monarchs had the authority & the resources. ...
The Grand ExchangeJAN2011
... created much better maps and charts of the sea and its currents. • Europeans mastered the use of the astrolabe, an instrument developed by the Greeks and mastered by the Muslims, to determine their latitude at sea. • The caravel, a ship that combined European body styles with Muslim triangular sails ...
... created much better maps and charts of the sea and its currents. • Europeans mastered the use of the astrolabe, an instrument developed by the Greeks and mastered by the Muslims, to determine their latitude at sea. • The caravel, a ship that combined European body styles with Muslim triangular sails ...
Review KEY - McCook Public Schools
... Under the Tokugawa shoguns what was trade like in Japan? Allowed trade at first then refused to allow it. Afonso de Albuquerque- Portuguese Admiral conquered trade routes to India Ferdinand Magellan- Credited with the first circumnavigation of the earth, died before the task was compete but his crew ...
... Under the Tokugawa shoguns what was trade like in Japan? Allowed trade at first then refused to allow it. Afonso de Albuquerque- Portuguese Admiral conquered trade routes to India Ferdinand Magellan- Credited with the first circumnavigation of the earth, died before the task was compete but his crew ...
Transoceanic Encounters and Global Connections
... • Combination of Mediterranean, N. European, Chinese, and Arabic elements • Ships and sails: rudder, triangular and square sails -> tacking • Navigational instruments: magnetic compass, astrolabe -> direction and latitude • Knowledge of winds and currents: trades and westerlies (in Atlantic and Paci ...
... • Combination of Mediterranean, N. European, Chinese, and Arabic elements • Ships and sails: rudder, triangular and square sails -> tacking • Navigational instruments: magnetic compass, astrolabe -> direction and latitude • Knowledge of winds and currents: trades and westerlies (in Atlantic and Paci ...
EuropeanExplorationAndColonization
... Expansion becomes a state enterprise monarchs had the authority & the resources. ...
... Expansion becomes a state enterprise monarchs had the authority & the resources. ...
European Exploration
... Expansion becomes a state enterprise monarchs had the authority & the resources. ...
... Expansion becomes a state enterprise monarchs had the authority & the resources. ...
The Age of Exploration
... ►Est a school for navigation ►Financed many expeditions along the West African coastline in hopes of finding gold ...
... ►Est a school for navigation ►Financed many expeditions along the West African coastline in hopes of finding gold ...
EXPLORERS DON`T “MISS THE BOAT”
... explorations of Bortolomeu Dias, and Vasco da Gama. He paid for Vasco Da Gama to explore the West Coast of Africa. He was trying to find a quicker route to Asia. Da Gama did reach Asia (India) Dias 1487-1488, da Gama 1497-1498 They sailed near Africa and South America Asia!!!! Wasn’t that where ever ...
... explorations of Bortolomeu Dias, and Vasco da Gama. He paid for Vasco Da Gama to explore the West Coast of Africa. He was trying to find a quicker route to Asia. Da Gama did reach Asia (India) Dias 1487-1488, da Gama 1497-1498 They sailed near Africa and South America Asia!!!! Wasn’t that where ever ...
European Expansion
... wanting to participate in trade with Asia, the Ottoman Empire briefly cut off trade between Europe and Asia. ...
... wanting to participate in trade with Asia, the Ottoman Empire briefly cut off trade between Europe and Asia. ...
European Exploration
... linked by overland trade routes, and by the Arab trading along the Indian Ocean. The four empires highlighted here were land-based, inward-looking, and ill-prepared for the challenge of European imperialism that would arrive by sea and, over the next four hundred years, effectively undermine them. ...
... linked by overland trade routes, and by the Arab trading along the Indian Ocean. The four empires highlighted here were land-based, inward-looking, and ill-prepared for the challenge of European imperialism that would arrive by sea and, over the next four hundred years, effectively undermine them. ...
Ch15-2
... areas from the time of the collapse of the Western Roman Empire until the Crusaders. Crusaders brought back luxury goods from their adventures, and late medieval and early Renaissance Italian merchants saw new trading opportunities. There were 3 well-established trade routes into which the Europeans ...
... areas from the time of the collapse of the Western Roman Empire until the Crusaders. Crusaders brought back luxury goods from their adventures, and late medieval and early Renaissance Italian merchants saw new trading opportunities. There were 3 well-established trade routes into which the Europeans ...
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.