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European Exploration

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Georgia s Early Native Tribes and Civilizations. ESSENTIAL QUESTION. What impact did European contact have on the Native Americans in the New World? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: European Exploration


1
European Exploration
2
Background
  • Europeans traveled to the Americas in the late
    15th century.
  • Conditions there were harsh.
  • Many Europeans died of disease or starvation.
  • Others were killed by Native Americans.
  • In turn, Europeans carried with them tools,
    goods, and diseases that would change Native
    Americans way of life forever.

3
Background
  • Europeans brought horses and guns to the
    Americas.
  • These tools helped them travel across large areas
    and conquer people.
  • With horses, Native Americans were able to travel
    and trade more easily.
  • Guns also became important for native people.
  • They made hunting easier and could be used as
    protection, too.

4
Native Americans and Europeans Impact Each
Others Culture
  • Many European countries believed it was their
    duty to spread Christianity.
  • Various Christian missionaries created
    settlements in the Americas to convert Native
    Americans.
  • A missionary is someone sent by a church to a
    foreign country to spread its faith.

5
Native Americans and Europeans Impact Each
Others Culture
  • The main functions of these mission settlements
    were to teach Native Americans the arts of
    civilization and to convert them to
    Christianity.
  • For the Native Americans, the missions
    represented a means to help them learn European
    languages in order to trade and negotiate in an
    increasingly white world.

6
Native Americans and Europeans Impact Each
Others Culture
  • Soon after the arrival of Europeans, slavery
    began in the Americas.
  • Native Americans were enslaved to work on the
    sugar plantations in the West Indies.
  • Diseases such as smallpox and measles, brought by
    European settlers, killed many native people.
  • The Native American population was too small for
    the large amount of work on the plantations.
  • Europeans had to look to another source of
    workers to enslave.

7
Native Americans and Europeans Impact Each
Others Culture
  • It was hard for Europeans to live in the
    Americas.
  • They were not familiar with local food crops.
    Supplies from Europe took months to arrive.
  • Some Europeans were friendly with Native
    Americans.
  • They learned how to farm crops such as maize from
    the Native Americans.
  • Many European colonies would not have survived
    without help from Native Americans.

8
Early Spanish Missions
  • Most early European exploration of the American
    Southeast was done by the Spanish.
  • They launched ships from bases in the Caribbean,
    Mexico, and Florida.
  • They explored the coastline of the Southeast.

9
Early Spanish Missions
  • They observed the barrier islands that line the
    coast of Georgia.
  • These islands were easier for ships to access
    than the mainland was.
  • Early missions were built on these islands.
  • From those missions, the Spanish then explored
    the coast.

10
Early Spanish Missions
  • The purpose of the missions was to convert Native
    Americans to Catholicism.
  • Natives Americans used the missions to help
    integrate themselves into the European world.
  • Mission settlements usually were located in
    chiefdoms and contained at least one church, and
    a house for the missionary.

11
Hernando de Soto
  • Hernando de Soto of Spain was the first European
    to see the interior of the American Southeast,
    including Georgia.
  • De Soto landed on the coast of Florida in 1539.
  • His party was large and well-equipped. He met
    many Native Americans along his way.
  • De Soto was looking for gold.

12
Hernando de Soto
  • He exploited many Native Americans in his attempt
    to find it.
  • At times, this exploitation meant befriending
    them.
  • Other times, it meant robbing or killing Native
    Americans.
  • After a three-year campaign, de Soto died without
    finding any gold.

13
Hernando de Soto
  • De Soto and his party were the only Europeans to
    see many Native American cultures before they
    declined.
  • De Soto wrote of his contact with the native
    peoples.
  • Today, historians benefit from de Sotos
    writings, Ironically, his party spread disease
    throughout the Native American culture,
    contributing to its collapse.

14
Causes of European Exploration
  • Europeans needed spices from East Asia. Asian
    trade goods were sold by Arab traders.
  • Since spices were very expensive, Europeans
    wanted to find a safe and fast way to reach Asia
    and acquire the spices directly.
  • They spent a lot of money to find this passage.
  • The country that found the western passage to
    Asia would control trade between Europe and Asia.
  • As a result of the Asian trade route
    explorations, the Americas were discovered.

15
Causes of European Exploration
  • After Christopher Columbus reached the Americas
    in 1492, rumors of the New Worlds wealth spread.
  • The stories spoke of cities where the streets
    were paved with gold.
  • The possibility of wealth and the power to
    control trade led all European countries that
    could afford it to spend money exploring the
    Americas.

16
France
  • In 1562, France sent explorers to North America
    in search of gold.
  • The French explorers made their way to South
    Carolina.
  • There, they started a colony called Charlesfort.
  • Soon, the explorers ran out of supplies and food.

17
France
  • A ship returned to France to get more supplies,
    but did not return to Charlesfort until 1565.
  • By that time, the settlers had left.
  • The French also founded a colony in 1564 called
    Fort Caroline, in Florida.

18
Spain
  • The Spanish, like all Europeans, were looking for
    wealth in North America.
  • They destroyed Fort Caroline to stop competition
    with the French over the wealth of the Americas.
  • In 1568, they built the first missions in the
    area of Florida where Fort Caroline had been.
  • This was the beginning of the mission period in
    the Southeast.

19
Spain
  • The missions were built to spread Catholicism.
  • Missions were also used to integrate Native
    Americans as members of a new form of society
    ruled by the Spanish colonial government.
  • This helped the Spanish control them.

20
Spain
  • Local chiefs still led Native Americans, but the
    chiefs were ruled by the Spanish colonial
    government.
  • The Spanish colonial government used the missions
    to communicate with the Native Americans.
  • Native Americans and Europeans also traded goods
    at missions.
  • Eventually, the mission system declined.

21
Spain
  • Native populations in the Southeast were
    shrinking due to deaths.
  • Many missions were left empty.
  • Slave revolts and English raids destroyed the
    rest.
  • The mission period ended in 1684.

22
England
  • Queen Elizabeth I ruled Great Britain from 1558
    to 1603.
  • She was a Protestant, which is a Christian
    religion that differs from Catholicism in its
    practice.
  • Great Britain was the enemy of Spain, a Catholic
    state.
  • Philip II, the ruler of Spain, built the Spanish
    Armada, a large and powerful naval fleet, to
    attack the British.

23
England
  • In 1588, the British defeated the Spanish Armada.
  • British naval dominance enabled it to explore the
    Americas.
  • It also signaled the decline of Spanish power in
    the Americas.

24
England
  • The British came to the Americas hoping to find
    gold.
  • They also realized they could make money by
    trading other items such as copper and furs.
  • They also traded enslaved Native Americans.
  • Many British slaves came from Georgias Native
    American population.

25
England
  • The slave trade resulted in the deaths of many
    Native Americans.
  • Many became involved in trading slaves
    themselves.
  • Others moved away from the region.
  • There are few records of what happened to most of
    the Native Americans who once lived in Georgia.

26
Summary
  • Describe why Europeans wanted to explore.
  • What impact did Native Americans and Europeans
    have on each other? (Include both positive and
    negative)
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