European Exploration - Scott County Schools
... • As Portugal & later Spain moved into the Atlantic, they encountered tropical islands • Diseases that they brought killed off the native people and they began using slaves purchased in West Africa to grow sugar • A new “Atlantic System” of trade develops • At first, Africans controlled slave trade ...
... • As Portugal & later Spain moved into the Atlantic, they encountered tropical islands • Diseases that they brought killed off the native people and they began using slaves purchased in West Africa to grow sugar • A new “Atlantic System” of trade develops • At first, Africans controlled slave trade ...
WHAP - Maritime Revolution
... – Venice & Genoa had pre-existing trade alliances with Muslims (access to SR through the Med.) – Ships too small for Atlantic Ocean – Merchant Princes supported trade in N Europe, Black Sea, Indian Ocean ...
... – Venice & Genoa had pre-existing trade alliances with Muslims (access to SR through the Med.) – Ships too small for Atlantic Ocean – Merchant Princes supported trade in N Europe, Black Sea, Indian Ocean ...
europeanexplorationpptx
... • After Columbus' voyages to the New World there was a concern that Spain and Portugal would have conflicting territorial claims, so a treaty was proposed in which Spain would claim lands to the west of a north-south trending meridian, and Portugal could claim lands to the east. ...
... • After Columbus' voyages to the New World there was a concern that Spain and Portugal would have conflicting territorial claims, so a treaty was proposed in which Spain would claim lands to the west of a north-south trending meridian, and Portugal could claim lands to the east. ...
New World Explorers
... • Thorfinn Karlsefni –mapped part of North American coast –Tried to settle Newfoundland ...
... • Thorfinn Karlsefni –mapped part of North American coast –Tried to settle Newfoundland ...
Early Exploration Notes
... ► Arab and Venetian (Venice, Italy) merchants got rich from trading these spices ► The Ottoman Empire, hostile to Christians, had shut off trade between Europe and the Far East ► Many traders looked for quicker routes to the east ...
... ► Arab and Venetian (Venice, Italy) merchants got rich from trading these spices ► The Ottoman Empire, hostile to Christians, had shut off trade between Europe and the Far East ► Many traders looked for quicker routes to the east ...
Exploration and Expansion
... on spices, such as pepper and nutmeg, from the east ► Arab and Venetian (Venice, Italy) merchants got rich from trading these spices ► The Ottoman Empire, hostile to Christians, had shut off trade between Europe and the Far East ► Many traders looked for quicker routes to the east ...
... on spices, such as pepper and nutmeg, from the east ► Arab and Venetian (Venice, Italy) merchants got rich from trading these spices ► The Ottoman Empire, hostile to Christians, had shut off trade between Europe and the Far East ► Many traders looked for quicker routes to the east ...
Document
... Vasco da Gama led successful expedition to India, 1497-99 Rejected Columbus because they knew his calculations were way off – underestimated circumference ...
... Vasco da Gama led successful expedition to India, 1497-99 Rejected Columbus because they knew his calculations were way off – underestimated circumference ...
File - The past matters.
... ▪ Taino were frightened of the conquistadors (soldier-explorers)Spanish had guns, cannons, and horses ▪ The Spanish enslaved and killed the Taino people ...
... ▪ Taino were frightened of the conquistadors (soldier-explorers)Spanish had guns, cannons, and horses ▪ The Spanish enslaved and killed the Taino people ...
File
... tried to help the natives by getting laws passed to end abuse. These laws were never enforced until 1542, when the encomienda system ended. Africans were brought over to work. ...
... tried to help the natives by getting laws passed to end abuse. These laws were never enforced until 1542, when the encomienda system ended. Africans were brought over to work. ...
Europe and Asia - White Plains Public Schools
... Lands. In 1275, the Italian trader Marco Polo reached the court of Kublai Khan in China. For the most part, however, Europeans had neither the interest nor the ability to explore foreign lands. That changed by the early 1400s. The desire to grow rich and to spread Christianity, coupled with advances ...
... Lands. In 1275, the Italian trader Marco Polo reached the court of Kublai Khan in China. For the most part, however, Europeans had neither the interest nor the ability to explore foreign lands. That changed by the early 1400s. The desire to grow rich and to spread Christianity, coupled with advances ...
Chapter 1
... Spanish America • First to dominate • Stumbled into regions that proved most immediately profitable • Encomienda – landowners controlled native population • Native population drop -> slaves imported from Africa • Christian Empire ...
... Spanish America • First to dominate • Stumbled into regions that proved most immediately profitable • Encomienda – landowners controlled native population • Native population drop -> slaves imported from Africa • Christian Empire ...
Age of Exploration
... • Spain used gunpowder and advanced weapons to conquer the Americas. (Think of conquistadors) • Additionally, Spain and Portugal got into many disputes over territory. Because both countries were mainly Catholic, they asked the Pope (head of the Catholic Church) to help them. He divided the world be ...
... • Spain used gunpowder and advanced weapons to conquer the Americas. (Think of conquistadors) • Additionally, Spain and Portugal got into many disputes over territory. Because both countries were mainly Catholic, they asked the Pope (head of the Catholic Church) to help them. He divided the world be ...
File - AP European 2016
... The Spanish were successful in conquering natives because they had (1) superior military technology, (2) help from natives, and (3)immunity to diseases like smallpox. Cortes and Pizarro are examples of conquistadores, leaders in the Spanish conquest of the Americas. ...
... The Spanish were successful in conquering natives because they had (1) superior military technology, (2) help from natives, and (3)immunity to diseases like smallpox. Cortes and Pizarro are examples of conquistadores, leaders in the Spanish conquest of the Americas. ...
The Age of Exploration
... navigation, to create better maps, navigation tools and ships. 2. Set up trade and colonies on east coast of Africa. Used cannons to negotiate trade rights with locals. ...
... navigation, to create better maps, navigation tools and ships. 2. Set up trade and colonies on east coast of Africa. Used cannons to negotiate trade rights with locals. ...
Exploration Notes—Copy these According to mercantilists, the
... 1. According to mercantilists, the prosperity of a nation depended on of gold and silver. 2. Aggressive Dutch traders were able to reduce the English influence on the spice market to a single port on the southern coast of Sumatra. 3. Buddhism became the dominant religion on the Southeast Asian mainl ...
... 1. According to mercantilists, the prosperity of a nation depended on of gold and silver. 2. Aggressive Dutch traders were able to reduce the English influence on the spice market to a single port on the southern coast of Sumatra. 3. Buddhism became the dominant religion on the Southeast Asian mainl ...
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.