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The Age of Exploration

The Age of Exploration. Underlying Causes. 1. Desire for Greater Wealth. 2. Expanded Knowledge. 3. Desire to Spread Christianity. 4. Technological Advances. 1. Desire for Wealth. The Crusades exposed Europeans to new products. 1. Desire for Wealth.

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The Age of Exploration

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  1. The Age of Exploration

  2. Underlying Causes 1. Desire for Greater Wealth 2. Expanded Knowledge 3. Desire to Spread Christianity 4. Technological Advances

  3. 1. Desire for Wealth • The Crusades exposed Europeans to new products.

  4. 1. Desire for Wealth B. Marco Polo’s stories excited Europeans about the riches of the East.

  5. 1. Desire for Wealth C. Italians controlled trade in the Mediterranean Sea.

  6. 2. Expanded Knowledge -- Geographic information from both Classical and Muslim scholars motivated Europeans to explore. 3. Desire to Spread Christianity -- the Crusades had awakened an interest in converting the non-Christian peoples -- ex. The Jesuits

  7. 4. Technological Advances A. The Caravel -- a ship that allowed open ocean travel

  8. 4. Technological Advances B. The astrolabe – allowed a captain to pinpoint how far north or south of the equator he was located.

  9. 4. Technological Advances C. The magnetic compass

  10. Early Exploration Portugal and Spain

  11. Portugal Led the Way • 1419 -- Prince Henry (the “Navigator”) established a school of navigation on the southwest coast of Portugal.

  12. Portugal Led the Way 2. Numerous Portuguese voyages mapped the coast of Africa and established trading posts.

  13. Portugal Led the Way 3. 1488 – Bartolomeu Dias reached the southern tip of Africa 4. 1498 – Vasco da Gama reached the coast of India

  14. Spain “discovers” America 1492 – Columbus reached the Caribbean islands

  15. Spain “discovers” America -- Later Spanish explorers claimed most of Central and South America for Spain, as well as much of North America

  16. Conflict between Portugal and Spain • 1493 – Pope Alexander VI drew the Line of Demarcation to divide Spanish and Portuguese territories. 1494 – Treaty of Tordesillas shifted the line westward

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