Title: Chapter 2: Exploring the Americas
1Chapter 2 Exploring the Americas
2I. A Changing World
- A. Expanding Horizons
- Marco Polo and the Crusades published Travels
after returning 1295 - Would inspire Columbus
- 1. Growing Interest
- goods and his book fuel this
- 2. Growth of Trade
- Pope Urban II called a Crusade in 1095
- Merchants bringing back spices cinnamon, pepper,
cloves - Merchant cities of Genoa, Venice, and Pisa
prospered - Called Commercial Rev. to pay for goods, farmers
produced more for a surplus, granted more
liberties by owners - Broke down feudalism
3Expanding Horizons Cont.
- 3. Growth of Ideas and the Renaissance
- Italian city-states wealthy, had free time, began
exploring its history - New interest in Classics
- Humanism explore and question ideas.
- Apply many subjects
- People think critically about everything, thirst
for knowledge - Paves way for age of exploration and discovery
- It spread to rest of Europe
4B. Powerful Nations Emerge
- Population increasing in 1400s
- Monarchs also expanding power and getting rid of
feudalism - Want to cut out middle men in trade
- Spain, Portugal, France, and England
5C. Technology
- Printing press in 1456 gets Polos story out to
more people - 1. Maps, Navigation Instruments, and Ships
- Improved maps, the astrolabe, improved compasses,
and better and faster ships allow explorers to
travel farther away from home and shore - Portuguese caravel an excellent ship, could go in
shallow water and handle rough seas - Spain and Portugal look for sea routes to Asia
6II. Early Exploration Vikings
- Leif Eriksson landed in Newfoundland, called it
Vinland - Founded a colony
- Erikssons brother Thorvald went and got in a
skirmish with natives and was killed around 1000 - After 1010, voyages stopped, too many problems
with natives - It didnt last and the legend of the new land
stayed alive only in Norse sagas
7A. Seeking New Trade Routes
- Maps only had three continents Europe, Asia and
Africa - No knowledge of other landmasses or size of
oceans - 1. Portuguese Exploration
- Took lead to fund voyages to China and India
- Prince Henry the Navigator funded and center for
exploration in 1420 - Ships explored west coast of Africa
- Traded for gold, ivory, and slaves
- Became known as Gold Coast
8Seeking New Trade Routes Cont.
- 2. Dias and da Gama
- Bartholomeau Dias reached Cape of Good Hope in
1488 but turned around because of a storm - Vasco da Gama went around the Cape (1497) made it
to Calicut in 1498 - Cabral swung so wide going around Africa that he
hit Brazil 1500, claimed for Portugal
9B. Christopher Columbus
- Born in Genoa, Italy in 1451 Cristoforo Colombo
- Sailed for Portugal early years
- Most educated people believed earth was round
- Most underestimated the world was smaller
- He believed Asia was 2,400 miles to the west
101. Spain Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand
- Reconquista over in 1492
- They will fund Columbus voyage
- He tried for years to get money
- 2. Columbuss First Voyage
- Left Aug. 3, 1492 in the Nina, Pinta, and Santa
Maria with about 90 sailors - Tierra! Tierra! sighted on Oct. 12, 1492 after
crew was getting testy - Landed on San Salvador in the Bahamas
- Claimed land for Spain and thought he was in the
East Indies - Estimated about 50 million natives in 1400
- Returned to Spain a great hero
113. Later Voyages
- Went back in 1493, 1498, 1502
- Explored the Caribbean and parts of South and
Central America - Died thinking he found the Indies
- 4. Dividing the World Line of Demarcation
- 1493 Pope Alexander VI drew line in Atlantic to
divide new lands Spain west of the line,
Portugal east - Later line mover farther west
- By then New World named America after the
explorer Amerigo Vespucci
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135. Exploring the Pacific and the World
- Vasco Nunez de Balboa
- Saw the Pacific from Panama
- Ferdinand Magellan
- 1519 explored South America, finally rounds the
Tierra del Fuego to see Pacific - Sailed to Asia
- Took four months ate rats, sawdust, and leather
to survive - Magellan killed in Philippines
- Crew finally made it back to Spain, only one of
the five ships and 18 of the 237 crew members
made it - First crew to circumnavigate the globe
14III. Spain in America
- A. Conquistadores Gold, Glory, and God
- Explorers had right to explore and establish
settlements in Americas - Had to give 1/5 of gold to the Spanish crown
- Greedy and ruthless, many times the second and
third sons of estates - Harsher to natives than other nations
151. Cortes and the Aztecs
- Came to Tenochtitlan in 1519
- Invited to live there with Montezuma
- Cortes took him prisoner when he feared a
rebellion - Kicked out, got reinforcements and took the city
in 1521 with only 500 men - Reasons why
- Allies
- Horses
- Gunpowder
- Aztecs thought he was long lost god Quetzalcoatl
- Disease
- 2. Pizarro Conquers Peru
- 180 soldiers captured Atahualpa in 1532
- Destroyed much of their army and took over the
empire - Moved the capital to Lima
16B. Spain in North America
- 1. Seven Cities of Gold, Garden of Eden, and the
Fountain of Youth - Juan Ponce de Leon
- Explored Florida for fountain
- His exploration led to first permanent settlement
in 1565, St. Augustine - Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca
- Explored Florida, sailed to Texas and lost most
of the expedition - Had to live with Natives to survive
- Finally made it to Mexico and told tales of
cities of gold
171. Seven Cities of Gold, Garden of Eden, and the
Fountain of Youth cont.
- Hernando de Soto
- Explored southeastern U.S., first to cross the
Mississippi, died of fever - Francisco Coronado
- Explored southwestern part of U.S
- No one ever found the cities of gold
18C. Spanish Rule
- Started pueblos, missions, and presidios
- Social Classes
- Peninsulares Spanish born, owned land, worked
for church and ran the govt. - Creoles Spanish descent born in America
- Mestizos Spanish and Indian mix
- Mullatoes African and White mix
- Natives usually slaves, had no rights
- Encomiendas
- Right to demand taxes and labor from Native
Americans living on the land - Made them slaves
- Plantation System
- Sugarcane and tobacco huge profits
- Indians dying so theyre replaced by Africans
- Portuguese do the same thing in Brazil
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20IV. Exploring North America
- A. Divided Church
- Martin Luther and 95 Theses
- 1. Protestant Reformation and Rivalries
- John Calvin, Henry VIII
- Nations divided among Catholics and Protestants
- French and Spanish vs. Dutch and English
- Settled different regions
21B. Economic Rivalry
- Mercantilism
- A nations power was based on wealth
- Try to increase the amount of gold and silver in
a country - Compete for overseas territory
- 1. Columbian Exchange
- European Invasion
- Exchange goods, people, ideas between two
continents
222. Northwest Passage
- Look for quicker route to China
- England sends John Cabot to explore in 1497
- Lands on Newfoundland
- 1524 France sent Giovanni da Verrazano
- Lands in Nova Scotia, Jacques Cartier explores
the St. Lawrence River - Henry Hudson
- Sent by Dutch first, finds the Hudson River
- Later English sent him and he finds Hudson Bay,
- Sailors kicked him off, never seen again
23Northwest Passage cont.
- French Open Trading Post
- Didnt want an empire, wanted trade
- Set up trading posts for furs
- 1608 Quebec founded by Samuel de Champlains
group - Trappers called coureurs de bois
- Dutch Settlements
- Big fleet of merchant ships
- Dutch West Indies Co. set up in 1621 and New
Netherlands - New Amsterdam bought in 1624 for 24 dollars in
beads, knives, trading goods for the island
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25The 13 Colonies UnitRegions in Review
- Main Idea Each colonial region had
characteristics that made the area unique when
compared to the other colonies.
26NEW ENGLAND
- Climate Long winters and rocky soil
- People English settlers made up the largest
group in the regions population - Agriculture Subsistence Farming
- Trade/Industry Timber and Fishing (part of the
Triangular Trade system) success led to the
Navigation Acts - Slavery Not economical for the region, but
slaves that did reside in N.E. worked in stables,
as servants, cooks, and gardeners. - Religion Mainly Puritan/Anglican
27Middle Colonies
- Climate Short winters and fertile soil
- People Immigrants from all over Europe (i.e
German, Dutch, English, French, Irish) - Agriculture Grew cash crops the Breadbasket
colonies - Trade/Industry Excellent harbors and trade led
to the growth of large coastal cities
(Philadelphia and New York) - Slavery 7 of enslaved people lived with in the
region- racial tensions led to some problems. - Religion Climate of tolerance no single
religious group dominated another
28Southern Colonies (Plantations and Slavery)
- Climate Warm climate and good soil (year round
growing season) - People German, English, enslaved Africans
- Agriculture Mass production of indigo, rice,
tobacco, and cotton- on PLANTATIONS - Trade/Industry Plantation economy- planter class
(white plantation owners) top social latter, poor
whites enslaved Africans have little power - Slavery 85 of enslaved Africans lived in the
region (40 of total population) - Religion Fairly tolerant
29Important Vocab Words to define and apply
- Subsistence Farming
- Navigation Acts
- Cash Crops
- Conestoga Wagon
- Plantation system (define the economic system)
- Overseer
- Stono Rebellion
- Fallline
- Piedmont
- Clans
30Final Thoughts
- Each colonial region was distinct, factors that
influenced their unique development include the
following - Climate
- People
- Agriculture
- Trade/Industry
- Views on and usage of slavery
- Religion