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New World Beginnings. Chapter 1 Pages 4 -2 7. Bering Land Bridge. Existed c.12,000-14,000 years ago and connected Asia to North America. Nomadic hunters follow animals across the bridge and migrate south. Disperse throughout North and South America. Early Civilizations.
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New World Beginnings Chapter 1 Pages 4-27
Bering Land Bridge • Existed c.12,000-14,000 years ago and connected Asia to North America. • Nomadic hunters follow animals across the bridge and migrate south. • Disperse throughout North and South America.
Early Civilizations • Nomadic Hunters in North and South America go through the Neolithic Revolution. • Systematic domestication of plants and animals. • People begin to settle in groups that turn to villages, then towns, then cities, then civilizations.
Early Civilizations • Mayas: Existed in the Yucatan Peninsula (modern day Mexico, Guatemala and Belize) • Aztecs: Existed in Central Mexico (modern day Mexico City) • Incas: Existed in the Andes Mountains along the west coast of South America (modern day Peru) • Various Indian Tribes
What’s Going on in Europe? • While civilizations in North and South America are flourishing, Europe is inching toward the Age of Discovery. • Remember: Ancient Times Middle Ages Fall of Rome (476 AD) You are here
Age of Exploration • Remember, history is always cause and effect. • What happened in the Renaissance Era that led to the Age of Exploration?
1. The Crusades • Crusades: 11th-14th centuries when Christians and Muslims battled over the Holy Land (Jerusalem) • European Christians were introduced to Asian spices, silks, perfumes, dyes and drugs. • Europeans love these items, which are deemed as luxury due to their rarity.
2. Fall of Constantinople • 1453: Ottoman Empire attacks the Byzantine Empire. • The Byzantine capital, Constantinople, falls to Muslim Ottomans, who re-name it Istanbul. • This takeover severs all European-Asian trade routes. Where else will we get out spices, silks and drugs?!?
3. Marco Polo • Italian Explorer who claimed to have spent 20 years in China. • Traveled along the Silk Road and met with Kublai Khan (grandson of Genghis Khan). • Inspired several explorers, especially Christopher Columbus.
Pre-Columbian Explorers • Egyptians? Egyptian hieroglyphics and artifacts have been found in the Grand Canyon in Arizona. • Leif Ericson: 11th century Viking explorer who landed in Newfoundland at L’Anse aux Meadows. • Chinese? Argue that Zheng He founded the New World in 1421, 70 years before Columbus.
New Routes to Asia • Due to the fall of Constantinople, Europeans needed to find new trade routes to Asia. • Portuguese are the first to find an acceptable route by traveling around Africa. • Created caravel ships to take advantage of the west African winds. • They set up several trading posts along the African Coast.
Portuguese in Africa • With these trading posts, the Portuguese engage in the gold and slave trade. • Some 40,000 slaves were taken from West Africa by the Portuguese in the last half of the 15th century. • Slavery is not a new concept. Africans had been enslaving each other for centuries prior to European contact.
Portuguese in Africa • Slaves were typically prisoners of war. • Portuguese would intentionally separate family members. Why? • Portuguese put them to work on sugar plantations on the Canary Islands, Madeira, Sao Tome and Principe. • Though conquering Africa brought riches, it still wasn't the Portuguese goal. They must push onward.
Portuguese Explorers • Bartolomeu Diaz: rounded the southern most tip of Africa, the Cape of Good Hope, in 1488. • Vasco da Gama: reached India in 1498. Returned with jewels and spices.
Christopher Columbus • Maritime explorer for hire. • Was convinced that the quickest route to Asia was not around Africa, but to the west. • Columbus presented his idea to both Portugal and England, who declined. • He then took his crazy idea to the Catholic Monarchs, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain.
Christopher Columbus • Ferdinand and Isabella financed his western journey and gave him 3 ships: Nina, Pinta, Santa Maria. • Left Spain with 88 men on August 3, 1492, but had to stop in the Canary Islands for repairs. • On September 6th, they set sail again and land was sighted on October 12th. • Columbus was convinced he was on islands off the coast of Asia (East Indies) and named the people “Indians.”
Christopher Columbus • Columbus made a few mistakes… • He thought the world was smaller in size. • He thought Asia extended further east. • He thought the ocean was only 2,500 miles long. • Oh yeah, there are 2 freakin’ continents in the way!
Christopher Columbus • His crew landed on an island in the Bahamas naming it San Salvador. • They sailed around the Caribbean, visiting Cuba and Hispaniola (modern day Haiti and Dominican Republic) • On Christmas Day 1492, the Santa Maria crashed in Haiti. • The Spaniards took the ship’s wood and built the first settlement in the New World – La Navidad.
San Salvador La Navidad
Christopher Columbus • Visited the New World 3 more times before his death. • He brought cattle, swine, horses and sugar cane to the region. • Sugar cane thrived in the warm Caribbean environment and becomes a huge economic force. • He never knew he has founded a the New World. He always though they were just islands of the East Indies.
Treaty of Tordesillas • 1494 agreement between Spain and Portugal to split the “heathen lands.” • Everything east belonged to Portugal, everything west to Spain. • Portugal gained all the islands off Africa, but Spain came out on top with the majority of modern-day South America.
The Conquistadors • Spain wanted to monopolize on the New World and get all the goods before anyone else. • Spain sent conquistadors or conquerors in search of the 3 G’s • God • Glory • Gold
Conquistadors • The Americas were named for Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci, who was the first to claim that America was a continent. • Ferdinand Magellan: 1st to circumnavigate the globe from 1519-1522. • Juan Ponce de Leon: 1st to step foot in modern day US. Landed in Florida in 1513.
Conquistadors • Francisco Coronado: discovered the pueblos of New Mexicoand Arizona from 1540-1542. • Hernando de Soto: founded the Mississippi River from 1539-1542. • Hernan Cortes: 1521 destroyed the Aztecs in Mexico. • Francisco Pizarro: 1532 crushed the Incas in Peru.
Conquistadors • Flood Spain with gold and silver found in the New World. • Spain surpassed Portugal to become the wealthiest and most powerful European country. • Gold and Silver fueled the growth of capitalism and laid foundation for modern banking system.
Encomienda System • System of slave labor. • The Spaniards were to protect, educate and Christianize natives. • The natives would “pay them back” in labor. • Legal in the eyes of the Spanish government.
Pueblo Revolt • Set back Spanish expansion in North America for a decade. • 1680: Pueblo Indians in New Mexico revolt against Spanish rule, encomienda system and Christianity. • Pueblo’s killed 400 Spaniards and drove 2,000 settlers out of the region. • 12 years later, the Spaniards return and crush the rebellion and the Pueblos.
Columbian Exchange • Trade route between the New World (Americas) and the Old World (Europe). • Europe to Americas: sugar cane, bananas, cattle, pigs, sheep and horses. • Americas to Europe: maize, squash, pumpkins, beans, sweet potatoes, tomatoes and peppers
Columbian Exchange • In addition to food and livestock, diseases were also exchanged between the Old and New Worlds. • Europe to Americas: smallpox, yellow fever, influenza, malaria and typhoid fever. • Americas to Europe: syphilis
Diseases • Due to European diseases, native Indians die in droves because they have no natural resistance. • Most afflicted never laid eyes on a European. • Examples: • Population of Hispaniola in 1492: 1 million. 1542: 200 • Population of Mexico decreases from 20 mil to 2 mil in 100 years.
African Slavery • Spread of diseases kills off the majority of the native population and therefore the workforce. • The Europeans need new laborers and turn to Africa. • Most slaves are taken from Western Africa and are purchased in exchange for rum and guns. • Europeans see Africans as primitive and barbaric, therefore, slavery is justified.
Triangular Trade • Different from the Columbian Exchange because it includes Africa. • Africa to New World: Slaves • New World/Europe to Africa: Rum and guns • The demand for sugar cane fuels the slave trade. • Slaves travel along the Middle Passage to the New World. Many die along the way.
African Societies • Actually very civilized! • Traded with Mediterranean societies (ivory, gold, slaves) • Some practiced Islam • Others practice animism and ancestor worship • Matriarchal societies • Africans are used to working in the same environment and with the same crops, so they won’t die off in the New World.
Tudor Dynasty King Henry VII: (1485-1509) • Sent John Cabot to the New World in 1497. He was the first European to make contact with North America. King Henry VIII: (1509-1547) • Broke away from the Catholic church and converted to Protestantism creating the Anglican (aka Church of England) Church. King Edward VI: (1547-1553 • Only son of Henry VIII, died at 15.
Tudor Dynasty Queen Mary: (1553-1558) • Catholic “Bloody Mary” • Was married to the Catholic Monarch of Spain, Philip II. • When Mary dies, Philip loses his wife, his ally and his English throne. He is not happy. Queen Elizabeth I: (1558-1603) • Protestant Queen
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Queen Elizabeth I • Makes Protestantism permanent in England in 1558. • This angers the Irish Catholics, who had been under English control since Henry VIII. • Catholic Ireland and Catholic Spain attempt to band together and rise up against Elizabeth.
Queen Elizabeth I • Elizabeth’s troops, led by Sir Humphrey Gilbert, crush the Irish rebellion and confiscated more land. • Instead of enslaving the Irish, the English create a rigid separation from them. This will carry on to the New World. • The loss to an Irish ally angers Philip II further and he must exact revenge on Elizabeth!
Queen Elizabeth I • Under Elizabeth, English exploration is attempted. • 1583: Sir Humphrey Gilbert tries to colonize Newfoundland (in Canada), but dies at sea. • 1585: Sir Walter Raleigh (Gilbert’s ½ brother) landed on Roanoke Island off the coast of Virginia. • He named the territory after the Virgin Queen, Elizabeth.
Roanoke • First English settlement in the New World. • Raleigh brought colonists to the region, but they soon began to die off due to dwindling food supplies and Indian attacks. • In 1586, Raleigh tried again to establish a colony at Roanoke, bringing 150 men, women and children.
Roanoke • The second attempt at Roanoke faired as the first, constant starvation and Indian attacks. • The colonial leader, John White, is urged by colonists to return to England to explain their plight to Crown and beg for supplies. • He leaves behind 115 colonists and returns to England in 1587.
But….. There is a slight problem that will prevent John White from quickly returning to Roanoke with those much needed supplies…..
Spanish Armada • 1588: Philip decides to invade England with a fleet of 131 ships and 17,000 men. • After losing several naval battles, the Spanish fleet decides to return home. • Instead of turning around, they decide to circle around England and Ireland. Not a good idea.
Spanish Armada • When the fleet rounds Ireland, a storm comes in and pushes the ships into the rocky shore and 15,000 die. • England dubs the storm the “Protestant Winds” and claim that God is on Elizabeth’s side. • The Spanish Armada marks the end for Spain and the beginning for England.
England on Top! • Spain is not the dominant force in Europe in anymore. • England now has: • Strong state with a popular monarch. • Religious unity • Sense of nationalism and national destiny • Naval dominance • Spain had been destroying itself anyway with inflation from all the gold and silver from the Americas.