Title: Give Me Liberty Ch01
1Title
Norton Media Library
Give Me Liberty! An American History
Eric Foner
2Chapter 1
Norton Media Library
Chapter 1
A New World
Eric Foner
3BEFORE COLUMBUS
4BEFORE COLUMBUS
5BEFORE COLUMBUS
- Evidence of human settlement dating to 35,000 BC
- People as Kitty Chow?
- Impact of hunting technology
- Spread of nomadic groups
- Differentiation by region
- Lack of surface mineral deposits (iron)
6BEFORE COLUMBUS
7BEFORE COLUMBUS
8But what about Europe at the time?
- Crusades --knowledge and a bit of flavor
- Reconquista in the Iberian Penninsula
- Black Death and the Mongols
- Emergence of (pre-)modern governments
- Nations -Decline of feudalism
- Strong monarchs -Mercantilism
- Renaissance
9APPEAL OF ASIA
- Spices pepper, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, cloves
helped cover the taste of spoiled meat - Tropical foods rice, figs, oranges
- Other goods perfumes, silk cotton, rugs,
textiles, dyestuffs, fine steel products,
precious stones, various drugs
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11II. The Expansion of Europe
- Portugal and West Africa
- Caravelle, compass, and quadrant made travel
along African coast possible for the Portuguese
in the early fifteenth century - The search for African gold drove the early
explorers - Portugal began colonizing Atlantic islands and
established sugar plantations worked by slaves - Slavery and Africa
- Slavery was already one form of labor in Africa
before the Europeans came - Europeans traded textiles and guns for African
slaves, which greatly disrupted African society - By the time Vasco da Gama sailed to India in
1498, Portugal had established a vast trading
empire
12PRINCE HENRY the NAVIGATOR
- The third son of John I of Portugal, Henry became
interested in navigation and exploration - Ships were clumsy, instruments for reckoning
latitude were inaccurate at best, and there were
no instruments for figuring longitude - Henry attempted to improve and codify
navigational knowledge
13PORTUGUESE DISCOVERIES(African American
Experience)
- Henrys captains sailed westward to the Madeiras,
the Canaries and south along the coast of Africa - In 1445, Dinis Dias reached Cape Verde
- In the 1480s King John II undertook systematic
new explorations focusing on reaching India
14II. The Expansion of Europe (cont)
- The Voyages of Columbus
- Christopher Columbus, an Italian, received
financial support from King Ferdinand and Queen
Isabella of Spain - Columbus landed on Hispaniola in 1492 and
colonization began the next year - Amerigo Vespucci sailed along the coast of South
America between 1498 and 1502, and the New World
came to be called America based on Vespuccis
name
15IV. The Spanish Empire
- Spain in America
- This aint China?! --New World!
- But is is a Christian world? No??? Good!
- Reconquista mindset
- Rivalry with Portugal ---gt Treaty of Tordesillas
- Cortes and the Aztec (Nahuatl)
- Montezumas bad timing
- Implications of human sacrifice
- Pizarro and the Incas
- No iron, but lots of GOLD AND SILVER
16IV. The Spanish Empire
- Spain in America
- Spain established a more stable government
modeled after Spanish home rule - Power ?owed from the King to Council of the
Indies to Viceroys to local of?cials - Gold and silver mines were the primary economies
in Spanish America - Mines were worked by Indians
- REQUIERMENTO
- Encomidas, repartimientos and haciendas
- Many Spaniards came to the New World for easier
social mobility - Spanish America evolved into a hybrid culture
- Peninsulares, criollos, mezstisos, negros
17IV. The Spanish Empire (cont)
- Justifications for Conquest
- To justify their claims to land that belonged to
someone else, the Spanish relied on - cultural superiority
- violence
- missionaries
- the Pope
- National glory and religious mission went hand in
hand, with the primary aim of the Spaniards to
transform Indians into obedient, Catholic
subjects of the Crown
18IV. The Spanish Empire (cont)
- Spain and the Indians
- Bartolomé de Las Casas wrote about the injustices
of Spanish rule toward the Indians - He believed that the entire human race is one,
but supported African slavery - His writings encouraged the 1542 New Laws, which
forbade the enslavement of Indians - Black Legend was an image put forth, in part, by
Las Casas that Spain was an uniquely brutal and
exploitive colonizer
19IV. The Spanish Empire (cont)
- Spain in North America
- Spanish explorers migrated north in search of
gold - Ponce de Leon
- Florida was the ?rst region within the present
United States to be colonized by the Spanish - Narvaez
- Cabeza de Vaca
- Coronado and De Soto
- Juan de Oñate led settlers into present-day New
Mexico - Oñates methods toward the native Acoma were
brutal
20THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE
- Things Europeans gained from the New World
- Corn (maize)
- Tobacco
- Squash
- Beans
- Tomatoes
- Hot peppers
- Chocolate (cocoa)
- Potato (the one with the greatest long-term
global impact) - GOLD AND SILVER
21THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE
- Things New World natives gained from the Old
World - Herd animals (cattle, sheep)
- Horses
- Food crops sugar, rice, fruits
- Iron and gunpowder technology
- Christianity
- DISEASE
22DISEASE POPULATION LOSS
- Issue of terms genocide and holocaust
- While clearly there was a drastic reduction in
the Indian population after the arrival of
Europeans, it lacked the purposeful intention
implied by the above words - In fact, Europeans often needed the Indians help
for example - Spanish needed natives to work in mines and
fields and to build roads and buildings - French needed them for trade
- English depended on them for additional food and
knowledge
23DISEASE POPULATION LOSS
- Certainly the Europeans practiced barbarity in
dealing with the natives - De Las Casas and condemnation of Spanish
- Percy and example of English misbehavior
- But biggest killer was the many diseases
(smallpox, measles, bubonic plague, diphtheria,
influenza, malaria, yellow fever, and typhoid)
Europeans brought with them - Indians had no immunity, resulting in several
million deaths - Take a wild guess what did we get in exchange?
24V. The First North Americans
- Native American Societies
- Indians in North America did not resemble the
empires of the Aztec or Inca civilizations - Indians were very diverse and lived a variety of
ways, some settling villages and some wandering
as hunters - By the fifteenth century some Indian tribes
united into leagues or confederations in an
effort to bring peace to local regions
25V. The First North Americans (cont)
- Religion, Land, and Gender
- Despite some similarities between Indian and
European religious beliefs, Europeans still
sought to Christianize the Indians - Spanish and reconquista mindset
- The idea of private property was foreign to
Indians - Wealth and material goods were not sought after
by Indians as compared to Europeans - Many Indian societies were matrilineal
- Europeans and the Indians
- Europeans felt that Indians lacked genuine
religion - Europeans claimed that Indians did not use the
land and thus had no claim to it - Europeans viewed Indian men as weak and Indian
women as mistreated
26V. The First North Americans (cont)
- Indians and Freedom
- Europeans concluded that the notion of freedom
was alien to Indian societies - Indians were barbaric to the Europeans because
they were too free - European understanding of freedom was based upon
ideas of personal independence and the ownership
of private property, foreign ideas to Indians
27SPAINS EUROPEAN RIVALS
- 1497 1498 John Cabot explored Newfoundland and
the northeastern coast of the continent for
England - 1524 Giovanni da Verrazano explored from
Carolina to Nova Scotia for France - 1534 Jacques Cartier, also exploring for France,
sailed up the St. Lawrence as far as present day
Montreal - Fishermen from France, Spain, Portugal and
England exploited the cod and other fish off the
coast of Newfoundland
28WHY SPAIN FIRST?
- Spain had a large measure of internal tranquility
by the 16th century while France and England were
suffering from religious and political strife - Spanish seized those areas of the Americas which
were best suited for producing quick returns - First half of 16th century, under Charles V,
Spain dominated Europe as well as Americas,
controlling the Low Countries, most of central
Europe, and part of Italy
29DECLINE OF SPAIN
- Under Charles successor, Philip II, Spain seemed
at its peak - Added Portugal in 1580
- But there were a number of problems
- Corruption of Spanish court
- Overdependence on gold and silver of colonies
undermined local economy - Disruption of Catholic Church caused by
Protestant Reformation
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31PROTESTANT REFORMATION
- Catholic Church suffering from a variety of
problems in the early 1500s - Sale of indulgences
- Luxurious lifestyle of Pope and papal court
- Why were protests so successful this time?
- Charismatic Leaders
- Martin Luther, who started the movement in 1517
- John Calvin, who helped carry it forward
32PROTESTANT REFORMATIONPolitical Support
- German princes stopped payments to Rome and
seized church property - Swiss cities established political independence
from Catholic kings - Francis I of France, although remaining Catholic,
exerted authority over clergy - Efforts of Spain to suppress Protestantism in Low
Countries fueled nationalist movements - Henry VIII of England broke from Rome in 1534
when, in search of a male heir, he tried to get
his marriage annulled but the Pope refused - Implications in Ireland for America
33PROTESTANT REFORMATIONEconomic Issues
- It was originally theorized that because of the
Catholic Churchs idea of just price and the
fact that dislike of capital accumulation stifled
merchant acquisitiveness, the merchant class
supported the Protestant Reformation - However, many merchants, especially some of the
most successful (such as Italians and the wool
merchants of Flanders), remained Catholic - In some places merchants backed new Protestant
sects because made less financial demands than
Catholic Church
34PROTESTANT REFORMATIONEconomic Issues
- As commercial classes rose to positions of
influence, England, France and United Provinces
of the Netherlands, experienced a flowering of
trade and industry - DUTCH built the largest merchant fleet in the
world, captured most of the Far Eastern trade
from the Portuguese, infiltrated Spains
Caribbean stronghold - ENGLISH merchant companies began to play vital
role as colonizers forming joint stock companies
that were predecessors to modern corporation
35ENGLISH BEGINNINGS IN AMERICA
Martin Frobisher
- Muscovy Company spent large sums looking for a
passage to China around Scandanavia - In the 1570s, backed by Queen Elizabeth I of
England, Martin Frobisher made three voyages
across the Atlantic looking for a northwest
passage to Asia or new sources of gold - The queen also supported privateers such as Sir
Francis Drake, who preyed on Spanish shipping
Sir Francis Drake
36BEGINNINGS OF ENGLISH SETTLEMENT
- Elizabeth also backed settlement efforts such as
the unsuccessful efforts of Sir Humphrey Gilbert
in 1578, 1570, and 1583 - The first settlement, on Roanoke Island off the
coast of North Carolina in 1585, was sponsored by
Sir Walter Raleigh - Ships due to arrive in 1588 to re-supply did not
come due to the attack of the Spanish Armada and
when ships did arrive in 1590, not a trace of the
colonists could be found - The mystery of Croatan
37MOTIVES FOR ENGLISH SETTLEMENT
- Settlement efforts were costly and in 1584
Richard Hakluyt urged crown support - Stressed
- Military advantages
- The spread of Protestantism
- The possible enrichment of the parent country
through expanding markets, increasing tax
revenues, and the provision of employment and raw
materials - Easing of overpopulation
- Enclosure movement --gtlots of homeless peasants
- Elizabeth, however, did not pursue Hakluyts
suggestions and the settlement that started in
earnest after her death in 1603 was backed mainly
by merchant capitalists not the crown
38DEFEAT OF THE SPANISH ARMADA
- Philip of Spain (brother-in-law to Elizabeth)
wishes to conquer England in the name of the
Catholic Church - Huge invasion fleet assembles across the Channel
- Drakes fleet crosses the T on the Spanish
Armada - Spanish dominance of the Atlantic seriously hurt
by destruction of fleet - Increased explorations of North America by the
English are a direct consequence
39VI. England and the New World (cont)
- England and New World Colonization
- The English crown issued charters for individuals
to colonize America at their own expense, but
they failed - National glory, profit, and a missionary zeal
motivated the English crown to settle America - A Discourse Concerning Western Planting (Hakluyt)
argued that settlement would strike a blow at
Englands enemy Spain - It was also argued that trade, not mineral
wealth, would be the basis of Englands empire
40VI. England and the New World (cont)
- The Social Crisis
- A worsening economy (The Great Inflation) and the
enclosure movement led to an increase of the poor
and a social crisis - Unruly poor were encouraged to leave England for
the New World - Masterless Men
- The English increasingly viewed America as a land
where a man could control his own labor and thus
gain independence, particularly through ownership
of land
41VII. The Freeborn Englishman
- Christian Freedom
- To embrace Christ was believed to provide a
freedom from sin - Theology Erasmus, Calvin
- Ties to politics Henry VIII
- Christian liberty had no connection to later
ideas of religious tolerance
42VII. The Freeborn Englishman (cont)
- Freedom and Authority
- Obedience to law was another definition of
freedomlaw was libertys salvation - Under English law, a woman held very few rights
and was submissive to her husband - Freedom was a function of social class and as
such a well-ordered society depended on obedience
- Liberty was often understood as formal privileges
enjoyed by only a few
43VII. The Freeborn Englishman (cont)
- The Rights of Englishmen
- The Magna Carta was signed by King John in 1215
- It identified a series of liberties, which barons
found to be the most beneficial - The Magna Carta embodied the idea of English
freedom - habeas corpus
- the right to face ones accuser
- trial by jury
- English Civil War of the 1640s illuminated
debates about liberty and what it meant to be a
freeborn Englishman
44VII. The Freeborn Englishman (cont)
- Englands Debate over Freedom
- The Levellers called for an even greater
expansion of liberty, moving away from a
definition based on social class - Diggers were another political group attempting
to give freedom an economic underpinning - After the English Civil War, there emerged a more
general definition of freedom grounded in the
common rights of all individuals within the
English realm - a belief in freedom as the common heritage of all
Englishmen - a belief that England was the worlds guardian of
liberty